~~ 
The Weather a a 
U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast 
Snow flurries, little warmer 
(Details on Page 2) & 
6th YEAR s re * rn A PONT AC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, HE PONTIAC PREf 1958 —28 Pz AGE ES 4 
P 
  
ASSOCIATED PRESS 
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 
  
Oakland Pioneer ‘ 
* 
Bush Fre Rages on Coa   
Reuther and Romney 
to Serve on COMEF LANSING (i—Gov. Williams has announced the com- Reject Soviet 
Berlin Pressure position of the 100-man committee on Michigan’s Eco- 
momic Future (COMEF) which will strive to advance 
Foreign Minister Meet the state’s economic status. Serving side by side in the 
Opens With Squabble group will be Walter P. Reuther, United Auto Workers 
Between U.S., France chief, and George Romney, president of American 
‘Motors Corp. 
PARIS () — The foreign, . The committee was assembled by William M. Day, 
ministers of the Atlantic,president of Michigan Bell Telephone Co., whom the | 
Pact countries today re- governor named committee’ 
jected | Soviet pressure on|Chairman earlier this year. 
Record System | 
Called Weak Berlin. It includes a 30-man board 
But bitter disputes over ‘of directors and a 70-man) 
Critic Turns in Report 
on Police Methods to   NATO Leaders 
  
  other issues divided some of advisory y council. |the Allies. Day said yesterday the pay s 
limmediate attention would be 
| The annual meeting Of |cused on opportunities offered by 
ithe 15 NATO foreign min- ithe scheduled spring opening of the: 
listers opened with (1) Brit-| St. Lawrence Seaway, mining, ¢ elec-| 
‘tronics, missiles and tourism.     BEAUMONT TAYLOR MRS. ELIZA Capistrano in Danger — + 
Flames Devour 
40,000 Acres, 
Raze 18 Homes- Marines, Soldiers Join 
Desperate Fight to Get 
Inferno Under Control i 
  FROM OUR NEWS WIRES 
SAN JUAN CAPIS- 
TRANO, Calif—A gigantic 
brush fire that has black- 
ened nearly 40,000 acres 
and destroyed 18 homes 
raged out of control today 
itoward a populated area. 
Hundreds of firemen in- 
cluding Marines and sol- 
diers from nearby bases, 
were massed fighting ahead 
  | 
‘ain and France screaming) He poted ihai alilat bi | » note a 0 s selec: 
eS ASI en Q e ld eS at each other about trade) tions had agreed to work om the | 
‘discrimination; (2) United! George Eastman | 
project and said he hoped to call | 
  of the blaze- 
Diminishing ‘winds 
‘States and France quarrel-| the first meeting of the board of | A voluminous report criticizing helped the fire fighters dur- 
jing openly about military! ‘ directors early in January. ithe Pontiac Police Dept. records | ing the night. The fire is 
Tf dy in I dn olicy; and (3) Greece, Tur-| Willams. vacationing in Florida, System had been made to Publ: s oe, now controlled around half 
P issued a statement through his of-| | Safety Director George D. Engl AP © Wirephoto of its 70-mile perimeter. 
[key and Britain disputing fice which pointed out that COMEF|/ man by a California police cap- FIRE. SWERPS ON — A fireman leaps away from a spear of flineed th strong desert winds 
By REBA HEINTZELMAN lover Cyprus. ‘represents all types of business. |,.jn | flame that swept suddenly toward him as he fought a roaring |WP. the flames toward the sea 
h KAS 9 . dee eng she aye . : Cee ae _& es wider and to within five miles of the h Amid all the wrangling, a cer-labor and all shades of social and), ees . Perce. brush fire in the Hot Springs canyon near San Juan Capistrano, |#"° ’ ‘ ¢ his- Mrs. Eliza Beaumont Taylor, believed to be Michi- political opinion: Cart SRST Shei clita) Bene wie wectemdiay, Plamen Kase visible in Los Angeles, 60 miles {toric mission town of San Juan 
gan’s oldest resident, is celebrating her 109th birthday ‘7 2™0U"! of unanimity appeared The statement added: Hey (Calif) Police Dept. turned) | . (Capistrano, \to be emerging over Berlin. “The aim of COMEF is a very ‘ever his findings to Eastman after) “" °°" - 7 st Poe ee today at her Highland Township home on 250 Center St. 
And the fact that friends are stopping by to congratu- 
late this Oakland County pionee r lady ¢ on the occasion | completing an exhaustive two-week practical one. In order to choose! istudy of city police records the proper tactical moves for the} 
ieconomic development of the state, The ministers also agreed to 
advise the Soviet Union that the 
Western powers are ready to ne- Many of the records, he said, 
doesn’t appear to bothe:’ 7 — | gotiate at a high level for a gen- Michigan business, govern-| are nothing but meaningless pa- 
her a bit. She's amazingly | Kea, of the problems Eg ae iin ang Jabor must) per werk. 
spry and alert for one her Tomorrow } ° Sa es soune strategy. — A “IT counted more than 265 sep- 
- | These would include reunifica-! us strategy must be based) arate forms used, many of them| 
age to Be y) Degrees ition of Germany with Berlin as its UPON an intelligent and carefully) without purpose,’ Capt. Sherry! 
kvery day Fliza gets up, dresses ‘capital, European security meas- @'a’n picture of state and national) said. 
and eats a hearty breakfast. In Warmer SAS “ ures and disarmament questions. €COnomic trends. } 
| 
reported | 
not be “I am confident the outstanding than the Los Angeles Police Dept.” 10 pounds 
group Day has assembled will be; Sherry has been working in the, und claims <A few flurries and con-|t fact, she has ained 
since her 108th birthdays A Norwegian diplomat 
snow hat this agreement may Report on Pontiac Vice 
Exaggerated, Says Glynn 
Former Pontiac mayor and city commissioner J. H. 
“Pontiac police use more forms| Patrick Glynn commented today on recent reports on 
‘vice in Pontiac. The ‘huge blaze, the second 
large brush fire in southern Cal- 
> iférnia, © weeks, broke out 
Sunday mth along by 40- 
mile-an-hour Winds, spread quick- 
ly through the tinder-dry canyons 
and motntains in Cleveland Na- 
tional Forest. 
Walls of flame 40 and’ 50 feet 
j|high cut a swath through the brush 
jand small tree-covered  can- 
lyons and steep mountain-sides to   “It is the duty of every citizen to stamp-out vice and) ‘San Juan Hot Springs about 10 imiles north of this historic mission 
jtown and destroyed 17 summer 
abins. 
All residents in the burned area 
jhad been evacuated, No injuries 
jhave been reported. 
in the world.| | A black palj of smoke 4,000 feet 
thick rose from the fire and spread 
out“in the sky. drifting northward   
  England (UPI) — 
ears and repeat fand west toward Los Angeles 70 
|miles away. 
| The smoke pall blotted out the 
'sun, and debris earried along with 
lit was dumped in quantity over “i 
\areas as far north as Long Beach 
land Los Angelees. 
Whirlwinds created by the blaze 
aaa whole balls of flame up 
jinto the sky and dumped them 
imiles ahead of the firelines to cre- 
‘ate an added hazard to firefighters. ’ said pro- 
Gerald Batty 
  ; as Ms ‘ t ; 5 ce s ~ > p that she “never had it so good \tinue@ cold temperatures is the/reflected in the NATO declaration able to draw such a pictur records section of the Berketes! ti sherever it may+——— poe The reason, she says, is that forecast for tonieht andl tomorrow jon Berlin, but he said it certainly, Police Dept since he Joined: it 7 corrup 10n, W r 
_ ; : ; . ; iwould be conveyed to the Soviets, | years ago. The Berkley force is na- o¢eyr. le her grandniece, Mrs. Olive |The Jow tonht will be a_ little h U & Hat ‘tionally known as a model small- |among the finest in the United| 
Clark, with whom she makes her _;When the United States, Britain ane ras es, “However,. the recent exagger- States and respected as such. ane, is the “best cook In (he higher, about 11 degrees. Tomor-iand France for mally answer Mos-, ‘town potice department bi f fitinns: “We build the finest motor cars| 
csantes” and takes expert care row’s high will hit near 23 cow's recent note proposing that) For ‘his services, Capt. Sherry ated s aw tee aie Ge jtruc ri and buses 
ie me: ‘ Ate West Berlin be made a demil l in even en ijreceived $750 plus expenses, aC Sra = eit of the little woman who was The Weather Bureau said today st ; I ‘ ade a demili- | Iflec tion on our city government,! “Let's help build Pontiac up — 
born during the 1849 Gold Rash the persistence of such abnormally arized free city | . : . A lack of centralization is the | jour fine police department, the not tear it down.” 
days. cold weather so early in the sea-| - > Fetal Se R. ant basic garden " we Pontiac | judicial department (which is one 
. he Western Big Three report-/'/ 1\—Seven men, including five: system, according to Sherry's re- > + , e When the area around. Highlandison exceeds anv record since 1871. ie pe can . _ ee ote jot the best in the country), Th 
mt sotliin@ Ht suninhabiicad wil . adi. were drafting a reply to Pre-|executives of a New Jersey) port. (Press, and upon the integrity of ‘Po y Wants Ae 
is cnotung Ot LOU ‘I The Bureau started keeping rec- . . ‘oncer re c ay} ‘ dertess “nd. @ingin timber. Eliz’ Lema i f mier Nikita Khrushchev’s Nov. 27)concern, were killed Monday) During his survey. he found that our many fine churches. 5 
— ords in 18%. note. His‘note called for an end’ when their company-owned plane! oes s 12 different| | NORWICH, folks “received one of the first fed-! * * * A the department uses 13 differen “Reading the- articles would | + - , | and erante and ectile ld to the four-power occupation of crashed in a swamp during a ete of fingerprint files, “Only one! hed ee | the local theater company adver- 
ee) nel eren . and “ Me Gown! During the 18 day period since Berlin, turning. West Berlin into snowstorm adi (oe : jead ee . : € ae i ‘. re wot tised today for an-OLD parrot to 
In Min log cabin on the eae of the cold wave swept in, Nov. 27, ‘ ist-sur sy a } i> i . : s a den of inquity, whic s not May gz e in ‘Treas *sland.' White Lake : ‘our aes nae Oar - ja C mmunist surrounded, demili-| * * * | He also criticized the fact that. xo play a role in ‘‘Treasure “sland.” 
‘ , ontyon four days — Dee. throug’ tarized free oity within six months. The pilot, copilot and five execu’ peeords pertaining to a case might . No young parrots need apply, 5 5 — — ¢ . tompe re clim : ‘ - CS ~ mone ean . i Pa - = RNEW HARDILLPS a did the { mw ook om The reply, ° informants. said, jfives of the Johnson & Johnson! he found in any one of several of New industry would and will since“the young ones only peck 
\s the voungest of nine ade n ot NE REECE AN, MOWDLO WE) OE would reject the Soviet proposal jCo. of New Brunswick, N. J..! tices , not locate in Pontiac, and bring ss) at ‘strangers’ 
Eliza knew the hardships of hav1 “ * * * outright and suggest the time “re ¢n route from Linden. N. J.) petectives should not be allowed) families into such an environment | Scrvthing they hear, aay oye tnieine | ' ste a“ ow ol ur are in ) aI 
Leemelsnossioy CMON ind | th The Weather Bureau Said the! 8&#¢@ come for ‘a fresh lock at [© Boston. fo mark their cases “cleared” or| Puce 7 sae _ humbered as on aan in: . of cookine meals in an enix das: wath normal Ponti ve tem: the situation in Germany and | The businessmen were headed: ‘closed’' a5 they do in Pontiac. | : 
open trepl and plugging up peratur was Dec. 4. The aver.) Central Europe. | for the Gloucester, Mass., firm of) Sherry said 
cracks in the drafty cabin to keep! So > _ _ |LePage’s, a manufacturing divi- | ‘ u P age temperatures have been 12 de Among the key points in thel ges, a etur : “Of some 400 cases « found in| 
the wind and snow from coming a \sion of Johnson & Johnson, mak- the detective bureau. per is 
throush grees below normal draft was a reminder that Moscow | of medic ai supple eae ce Th rouen r An : . <c \ Ne e 
Five above was the lowest re-has not responded to the Big Three! PI were marked ‘cleat 
| The plane was last heard from |tiona] average is only 2 
  
  Et * ? 
Eliza said her father used to cording in downtown Pontiac pre- proposal Sept. 30 to begin ‘vork'! 9:3 per cent. 
ne ape j § . } > r ae : e t a S al encourage his daughters to go ceding 8 am The mercury rose at an expert level on German re- lat 30 a.m. when the pilo ‘Capt Sherry said 
. , : nee 
to square dances, the main form to 2] at 1 p.m unification, with a summit meet- ported Vones ol thes two engines * * } of activity a hundred vears ago, ing the eventual goal |dead over Franklin, Mass., about! Because the records: are con- 
saving ‘fa good square’ dance is + * * [> miles south of Boston ifused, an\ information taken from 
better than a kissing bee any ’ Moscow repeatedly has refuse dj A National “Guard helicopter) them on the city’s crime rate is ding © i T d Pp : “ : = 'spotted the wreckage in the wood-!doubtful, Capt. Sherry said. | nN O ay S Fess to discuss reunificgtion, saying the Me Te F . ; . : : land swamp some time later — * * * | There were corn husking, taffy Communist East rman regime) on the clorm pasced "and 4he} | : . . Ze y asse ane Sherry fe , Nnsive rec ' 
pulls and snow parties, but mosth must arrange this with West Ger- Un’ Came Dut Sherry left extensive recommen 
life invelved a lot of hard woik! Comies __............-.-. 1 many. _ dations behind for a centralized, 
for youn folks of early Michigan’ County News 10 NATO Secretary General Paul- ecoras gine . Ba di aan NX. Tacior said Fditorials © Genn Spaak « . ‘least six months to install and} : . AIS cece ee ee eee eee ri yaak said if was vers ’ aD t . ce Adenauer Back at Work ‘make it operative, he estimated 
* * * eee rete Ubely “ihat the mursters would | The present records setup was As the children grew up, the) Obituaries ...............-.. 4 discuss various plans to separate BONN Germany (AP) — Chan-! pe ; . ; . i : 2 , also criticized in last year's Public Beaumont family seld part of their’ Sports ............-....- 18, 19 troops facing each other along the! ceUlow Konrad Adenauer. &2 re- ia : = . . ; _ ‘Administration Service report on homestead and made a summer re Theaters omen wees . 20° Tron Curtain, including the Rapacki turned to his office today after ithe Pontiac Police Dept, sort on the beautiful lake. A bic) TV and Radio Programs 27 (plan for a central European zone, nursing a cold at home for eight! 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Worsen s ainecs se... 18:16 ifree of nuclear weapons. |davs. 
SR = — SR aaa aT ie _—- ——$$—$$<—$——— ——— $$ $$ — 
"~~~ Pontiac Area C. of C. 
Elects 5 Directors 
Five 
ito the 
| Pontiac 
‘merce Torch Frees Truck- Train Crash Victim 
new directors were elected 
Board of Directors of the 
Area Chamber of Com 
in balloting among Cham- 
|ber members concluded yesterday 
| Elected were Bernard W. Crean- 
dell, public relations director of 
|GMC Truck & Coach Division, 
‘William J. Dean of Dean Brothers: 
F. Milton Hathaway, an optome-,; 
trist: Leonard T. Lewis of the Lew 
is Furniture Corp... and Leshe R 
Ware of the Universal Onl Seal 
“Co., Inc 
All five men were chosen to 
serve three-vear terms on the 
l>-member Board of Directors of 
Their terms wil] ex 
1961 ithe Chambet 
pire Dee. 31 
    Pontiac Press Phote COUNTY EMPLOYVE CRITICALLY INJURED — A blow torch 
  
  was needed to free3 Donald W. €hambers, 30. of 79 Denison St., Martell, 51, of & Dwight St.. Pontiac, told sheriff's deputies he | 
Oxford. {rom this smashed Oakland County Road Commission didn't see the truck until an instant before the collision because 
frock which was struck vesterday afternoon by a Grand ok ink his vision was blocked by a hill. The collision occurred at an | | 
freight train in Avon Township. He was reported in ‘‘very critical” Avon road crossing. a 
condition today at Pontiac General Hospi Engineer _ A FAL AA EL ta aby ada anal tal 
  Some of 
ELIZABETH CADELL 
STORY: Angus Graham. invalided out of 
he Navy. is amused at being hired by Sir Claud a 
tialson officer” for the simple fob of courier on 
superlative Juxury bus tour in Europe He s 
in for his friend, Wax Sealine he driver is 
Brewer By 
THE 
Chapter 2 
They were moving. With the silence ana 
steadiness of a ship leaving the quay, they 
were making their way through the streets, 
heading toward the Channel and the ferry 
on which the Green Empress would cross to 
France 
* * * 
The journey had begun 
bine. Angus found, had been left 
A mirror, strategically placed, gave 
nie a view of the passengers seated ce 
hind him. 
He could observe them, identify them. 
soon it would be his duty- to move 
them down the spacious central 
to make his- first contact with and 
among 
corridor 
them 
IMPRESSIVE NAMES 
With mounting interest, 
roam over his charges. They 
ing the small printed passenger 
had been placed on each seat. | 
Angus glanced down his own plan and 
read the names upon it. They sounded im- he let his eyes 
were study- 
lists that 
pressive. 
“ Mr F. Brewer 
Mr Angus Graham 
1 Lord Lorrimeér 
M Lionel Yul 
The Hon Nagel Clunes 
4 Mrs Zoller 
5S Mr E. Zoller 
fii M C Seton 
7 Mr Stanton Holt 
& Sir Matirice Tarrant Bt 
9 Mr Denbyv-Warre 
19 Admiral Sir Rodnev Peterson 
Angus studied them. He had no diffi- 
culty in recognizing Lord Lorrimer, at whose 
House he had been, during his Naval days, 
a frequent guest. 
He did not think that Lord Lorrimer 
would recognize him, for on the occasions 
on which his son’s Naval friends had. held 
parties at the house, he and his wife had 
tactfully absented themselves. 
Mr. Zoller was also easy to recognize, His Passengers 
for he appeared regularly in the newspapers, 
his donations to charity, though generous, 
were not given without publicity. 
The Admiral was vaguely familiar. 
Angus groped in his mind to discover 
where he had seen him before. The oc- 
casion came back to him, and he moved 
his gaze to #ngela Clunes, daughter of 
Lord Lorrimer and sister of the gay 
—often too gay—Oliver Clunes. 
She was looking out of the window, and 
he could see only her profile. She Seemed 
prettier than he remembered, but his mems 
mory of her, he admitted, was hazy. 
LITTLE TOO FAIR 
- Studying her, he decided that she was 
a little too fair. He preferred black, glossy 
hair and round black eyes. He could see, 
from this angle, little resemblance to her 
brother. 
His eyes went to the man seated in 
front of her, her father’s secretary, 
Lionel Yule. He and she would make a 
handsome pair, he mused, if ever they 
made a pair. On the whole, he hoped 
that they wouldn't, for at a first glance, 
he felt that he would award Mr. Yule 
more marks “05 deportment than for 
charm. 
From the frequent glances he was giv- 
ing over his shoulder, it was easy to see 
that Angela occupied a large part of his 
mind, but Angus hoped that she would look 
further before making a choice. 
Perhaps, he reflected, she would marry 
Yule out of kindness. Women were like that. 
Take his own case, nobody had shown any 
great eagerness to marry him when he had 
a good, steady job as Naval lieutenant, but 
put him in a rugger accident and get him 
thrown out on his ear, and women flocked. 
Kind, -but mistaken. : 
On an impulse, he rose and stepped 
into the main part of the coach. It was 
not the scheduled time for his tour of 
the passengers, but he had a strong de- 
sire to hear as well as s®e them, to in- 
terview rather than view. 
-} (Continued on Page 5, Col. %) 
     - est amounts, here are the amounts THE PONTIAC PRESS, Iv ESDAY, DEC EMBER 16,. 1958 
  
A check for $2,600,974 has been 
Treasurer’s Office from the state 
for distribution to the county’s 32 
school districts as their share of 
the third apportionment of state 
aid for 1958. 
In the order of the several high- 
the districts will receive frem 
Treasurer Charles A. Sparks: 
Royal Oak city, $276,870; Pon- 
tiac city, $264,060; Waterford 
Township, $200,932; Birmingham 
city, $171,870; Berkley, $139,185; 
Hazel Park, $131,497; Ferndale, 
$131,062; Farmington, $114,765; 
Walled Lake, $109,560; Soemtent, 
$100,012. 
Others are Oak Park, $70,125; 
Troy, $60,937; Avon Township, 10 
fractional, $51,562; Bloomfield Hills, 
$34,432; Brandon, $24,622; Clar- 
enceville, $38,362; Clarkston Com-| 
munity, $66,750; Clawson, $49,875; 
Holly area, $40,807; Huron Valley, 
$68,182; Lake Orion Community, 
$55,575; Lamphere Public School 
District, $60,499; Lyon Township, ! . c '. 
$2,600,974 State Aid 
Shared by School 
Royal Oak Township, 10 fractional, 
received by the Oakland: County) $67,747; West Bloomfield Township, 
$29,557; White Lake Township, $16- 
245; Oxford Township, 1 fractional, 
$172; Oakland County School Dis- 
trict, $36,000. 
received a check for $4,140 as its 
share of the payment from the 
state, 
Kai-shek and other Nationalist 
Chinese leaders were reported to 
have conferred today on reports 
that Mao Tze-tung is vacating the * * * ' 
The County Board of Education 
  
Security Office 
Very Poor Risk Most Heads of Russian 
Police Have Come to 
Some Bad End 
TAIPEI (AP)—President Chaing 
$31,875. 
Novi community, $10,560; Oxford Chi : - 
- area community, $32,145; Roches- iy Communist govern 
ter community, $72,937; Royal Oak 
Township, 1 fractional, $42,187 
Pioneer Resident 
Is 109 Today 
(Continued From Page One)   
white hoyse with a cut-stone front 
porch eventually was constructed. 
This stil] stands in the same spot, 
as a monument to one of Michi- 
gan’s oldest families. 
MARRIED LIEUTENANT 
Later Eliza met a dashing lieu- 
tenant in the United States Army 
and, after the Civil War ended, 
married him. They had four chil- 
dren. 
Mrs. Taylor is one of the few 
living people in the United States 
still receiving a pension as a Ci- 
vil War veteran’s survivor. 
Eliza's memory amazes her 
friends. She remembers when a 
few candies, nuts and fruits were 
the ultimate in Christmas gifts. A 
three-day trip to Detroit was ad- 
venture, and a new book a rare 
pleasure. 
What Confidence!   post of chairman—or president— 
The reports, originating from 
‘lunderground sources in whom full 
trust is placed here, had it that 
Mao would not be renominated for 
election as government chairman   SEARCH FOR KNIFE — A small knife, which 
State Police detectives believe could have been 
the murder weapon in the 1955 slaying of 7-year- 
old Detroit school girl Barbara 
object of a search yesterday by these three Army 
men using a mine detector in a field near the Gaca, was the  Budry, Walled Lake Amusement Park. The three, at- 
tached to an ordinance unit at Fort Wayne, also 
were seeking a pistol with which Walter H. 
25, of Berkley, admitted beating a clean- 
ing shop clerk last Tuesday. Neither gun nor knife 
have been found. |The Day i in Birmingham 
\Five New Adult 
to Be Offered in 
BIRMINGHAM —Five new 
courses described by Dr. Richard 
Featherstone, curriculum co- 
ordinator, as the most outstanding 
yet offered, will be sponsored by 
the Liberal Arts Adult Education 
Course of the Birmingham School 
District next Month. Each will be 
two-hour weekly sessions for 10 
weeks, 
Starting Jan. 13 will be “The 
Fiim—Evolution of a New Art.” 
The course will trace the history   
brariah, 
lar hours 
Service pared a list of Christmas greet-|% 
ings in several foreign languages. 
Miss Jeanne Lloyd, city. li- 
clude Russian and Japanese. 
The library wil] observe regu-|¢ 
for Dec, 24 when it will close at! 
Laura,,L, Hyland vived by a. sister, Judith Lynn, 
two brothers, William A. and Den- 
nis E.; and her grandparents, 
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hyland, 
all of Birmingham. . Courses 
January   
f NOVELTY Motal BANKS { Make Nice Christmas Gilts 
said the greetings in- 
Christmas week, except|§ 
for Laura L. Hyland, 
Things," and development of motion pic- 
tures aS an international art form. 
“The Age of Enlightment” 
will start Jan. 14, providing a 
study of the ideas of David 
Hume who touched off a philoso- 
prical revolution not yet con- 
cluded. 
A study of religions, including 
th» prehistoric cultures, will be 
given in ‘‘The First Cause of Ali 
Starting Jan: 22, Film 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and 
White Chape] Cemetery. 
The child died yesterday in St. 
Joseph Hospital, Pontiac, after 
an illness of only one day. 
  Mrs. William E. Hyland, 636/¢ 
Frank St., will be at 2 p.m. Thurs-|} 
day from the Manley Bailey Fu-|§ 
reral Home. Burial wil] -be in|@ be m With lock & key. 
Beside her parents, she is sur-|% 
  . Shaped 
with ee 
; CASH REGISTER BANKS ; MAIL BOX BANKS Shaped as a mail 
box. Holds coins. 
1.49: 
SAFE STYLE BANKS | 
eee es lock, = reaula: 
$2.95 v: 
—Serecieiinitiemicenesna x 
strips and slides-and a discussion 
group are included in the course. 
“Aesthetics in Your Flower Gar- 
den” will deal with all types of 
gardening and plants. Classes 
open Jan. 27. Pontiac Press Photo Hold pales. 
= dimes, 
ce] gd at tile 
ce 3.9) Many Other Styles Too! 
  
  
  
Hint to Husbands   
at the meeting to held at-Pei- 
ping in January. 
Nationalist leaders have accept- 
ed the report as authentic. 
There was no particular surprise 
caused by the fact that the re- 
ported decision was not publicly 
announced at the close Monday of 
the party Central Committee con- 
ference in Hankow. 
This is taken here to fpatieabe: 
That the party has still to decide 
how to break the news so that it 
will not appear that Mao, who will 
retain his post as party leader, is 
being downgraded. 
Also, the party wants to edu- 
cate special groups to the idea of 
Mao stepping out before springing 
the news on the 
The general. belief among Na- 
tionalists is that the 65-year-vld 
Mao, founder of the Chinese Com- 
munist revolution, is on the way 
out to retirement. 
There is speculation that Mar- 
shal Chu Teh, 72-year-old soldier 
turned politician, would succeed 
Mao, e 
Growing opposition to Mao's 
program is regarded as a main 
factor in the predicted replace-               NEWTON, Iowa (UPI)—When   ment. 
  police recovered a car stolen by 
three teenagers yesterday, the 
senior member of the trio, aged 
15, was teaching his two young- 
er companions to drive. 
  
Promoted at Houghton 
HOUGHTON w — G. Ralph No- 
ble has been promoted to associ- 
ate. director of Michigan Tech's In- 
stitute of Extension Services. He 
had been an assistant director of 
the institute.   has uprooted the traditional pat- 
tern of Chinese family life. 
are herded into working com- 
istate. 
  Communist press reports admit 
opposition to the program, that 
Under this program, the people their homes. 
lacquered Oriental tables for that 
vacant spot next to the sofa may 
put the little woman in a delighted 
trace. If she entertains this club 
and that, she'll love having an elec- Love Touch of Luxury 
By JANET ODELL 
There are hundreds of gifts in 
local stores that will gladden the 
feminine heart, come Christmas. 
You might remember that most 
women love luxury, regardless of 
what they say. This article is 
slanted at husbands. 
By all means buy your wife a 
beautiful lounging robe or house-. 
coat. But shun the floating chif- 
fon and the sweeping skirts un- 
less you have a retinue of serv- her with a copy of | 
ants to do the work. Women who |Saarinen's ‘The Proud Posses- 
get breakfast in a housecoat don’t | sors.’ 
want to trail chiffon sleeves in 
the ‘oatmeal. 
They'll be delighted with nylon 
quilted dusters or pretty house-) 
coats made of a charming rosebud 
print. You might add a pair of 
warm slippers. 
* * * 
Most women like something for 
A nest of hand- 
  
munes where they live in dormi- 
tories, Children are raised by the 
The official Nationalist Central 
Daily News said it was obvious 
that Moscow must have applied 
pressure for a change of govern- 
ment leadership at Peiping. 
  
As Frost Bites at Florida Crops   
Warm Belt Heads East 
By United Press International 
A warming trend surging out of prevent damage to northern Flor- 
ida’s citrus and vegetable crops. Find Couple 
Dead in Motel . Jackson Pair Staying 
in Same Room Where 
Similar Case Occured 
BLUNTSVILLE, Ala. (® — Po- cups of coffee at once. 
er-of-pearl bodies. 
    Bloomfield Hills architect. 
  
the plains today promised at least 
a temporary break in a record 
December cold wave gripping the 
East. 
* * * : 
The warmer weather, boosting 
readings an average of 10 to 15 plunged to near or below rero 
the Northeast, with below freez- Overnight readings again 
in the Great Lakes region. and 
ing weather ranging southward 
through the Ohio Valley into the 
Gulf Coast states. 
  degrees in its path, was expected 
to reach into the East today, al- 
though it may arrive ‘too late. to 
The Weather 
Full U. 8. ee Bareee Report 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY Pa 
a“ pees Leas 22. Lew tenigh 
High tomerro 23. Winds west 
southerly te 
Today in Pontiac 
Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 
At 8 am.: Wind velocity 7 m.p.h. 
Direction: Southwest 
Rigcree t in Pontiac 
<a downtown) 
See arr 
Mean temperature Pe 
Weather—Pair 
Bighest a nad Lowest. Temperatures 
This Date in 86 Years 
53 in 1940 -3 in 1951 
Menday’s Temperature Chart 
    Alpena * 20 8 Martuette 124 
Baltimore 26 11 Memphis 30 «18 
23 21 Miami TE 39 
Brownsville 86 36 Milwaukee 9 0 
Buffalo 21 #11 Minneapolis 15 9 
Charleston 40 28 New Orleans 45 33 
Chicago 16 9 New York 33 19 
Cineinnati " 13 Omaha 33 «16 
Cleveland 15 10 Pelston 17 
Denver. 57 68% mix 72 #41 
19 9 Pittsburgh 15 
19 -6 St. Louis 35 O18 
Ft. Worth 64 29 S. Francisco 64 5 
Grd. Rapids 1¢ 6 8. 6. Marie 16 -4 
Houghton 100067 «Tray. City ll 
ville 45 33 Washington 27 15 
Kansas City 38 27 Gesitle 53 
7. 87 Tampa 43 14. Snow flurries swirled across the| southwest ce — teday, becoming Atlanta, Ga., had an early morn- 
ing reading of 25 degrees while 
Kansas City in the warmer belt 
recorded a 27-degree temperature 
at the same time. 
The intense cold in the south- 
land reached into northern Flor- 
ida for the second night, threat- 
ening to frost crops in the area. 
Great Lakes region during the| 
night and into parts of the Ohio 
Valley and New England, with the 
heaviest snow falling in western 
New York. 
The weather bureau at Buf. 
falo, N. Y., warned of a 5-to-10- 
inch snow accumulation in the 
area with poor visibility due to 
blowing and drifting snow. 
Speed limits were cut from 60 
to 35 miles an hour on the New 
York Thruway south of Buffalo 
to the Pennsylvania border and 
in the Niagara and Tonawanda 
sections. 
Light snow also hit western 
Pennsylvania, along with high 
winds which piled up drifts and| 
made driving hazardous. Another 
inch of snow was expected in the) 
Erie area which last week was hit 
by a 25-to-30-inch accumulation. 
In contrast to the rest of the na- 
tion, California was experiencing] i 
a record warm, dry December.               
      No. 6 of Fred's 
been dead several hours when 
found. lice are investigating the deaths of 
a middleaged Jackson couple 
whose bodies were, found yesterday 
in the same motel room in which 
an elderly Horton couple died 
nearly a year ago. 
* * * 
Horton is about 15 miles south- 
west of Jackson. 
Yesterday’s dead were identi- 
fied as Richard Munger, 54, of 
4307 Donnelly Rd., Jackson, and 
his wife, about the same age. 
Coroner J. R. LeCroy said cause 
of death was asphyxiation by car- 
bon monoxide gas. 
The Mungers were found in room 
otel. They had 
Both Mungers were clad in night 
dress. Munger lay on a bed and     rate file of recipes. 
pensive.) 
Christmas. Remember, Most Women 
tric coffee maker that makes 24 
Bracelets are more popular | |Hickey, present 49er offense coach, 
than they have been for many iS being signed to succeed Frank 
years. We saw some that were 
delicately made in an intricate 
| design and set with stones. Wrap | 
up an amusing pin for her. suit; 
little bugs or roosters have moth- 
Should her interests lie in the | 
field of cooking, you'll really im- 
press her with a copy of Life's | 
Picture Cookbook with its sepa- 
(It’s ex. | 
If none of the above strikes yout 
fancy for your wife, go to the bank) er to the invitations to his birth- 
and acquire some of that nice, 
crisp, green folding stuff. Then she| antee near-perfect attendance. 
can go on a shopping spree after, Name Red Hickey 
Coach for 49ers 
| SAN FRANCISCO UW —. Howard 
eae Hickey is the new head 
‘coach of the San Francisco 49ers. 
The owners of the National Foot- 
‘ball League club announced today 
Albert who resigned last week. 
* * * 
A University of Arkansas. star, 
Hickey captained the Razorbacks 
jin his senior year and played here 
lin the East-West Shrine game. |           If she is interested in art, present Pittsburgh drafted him. Then the the A. Rose home, 1192 Aline B ‘Los Angeles Rams bought him. | 
After service in the Navy, Hickey 
played end for the Rams from) 
’ Mrs. Saarinen is the wife of/194) through 198, then was a Los} considerable amount of furniture! 
Eero Saarinen, the widely known Angeles assistant coach from 1949 
ito 1954 when he was hired as an! 
laide by the late Norman (Red) 
Strader, head coach for the 49ers. | 
  
Able and Willing 
| BASSFIELD, Miss. (UPI) — 
John Adam Faler added a teas- 
day party that ought to guar- 
Faler, 
and kick up my heels. 86. promised to ‘dance oe \swer to many requests, has pre.) The normal personality and hu- 
man behavior will be explained in 
the class on ‘‘Why We Behave Like 
Human Beings,’ scheduled to be- 
gin. Jan. 28. 
Enrollment is now being ac- 
cepted at the adult education of- 
fice in the Hill Building. 
  
Public ‘necessity was declared 
for the Lake Park storm sewer 
project at last night's city commis- 
sion meeting. Engineering plans 
and assessment district details 
were authorized. ~~ 
City Manager L. R. Gare was 
instructed to prepare plans for 
a driveway around the Lincoln 
access ot Fairway drive. He 
also was asked to prepare ease- 
ments for the installation of 
sewer and water lines along 
the street. 
  
    Defective’ wiring in the attic of 
Atkinson | 
Rd., Bloomfield Township, caused | 
extensive fire damage last night. | 
Firemen said the home and al 
were burned. But no estimate has 
ye been made by the fire de-' 
partment. 
  Baldwin Public Library, in an- 
  
Bay City Woman Killed 
BAY CITY Ww — Mrs. Frances, 
Monville, 64, of Bay City, was 
struck and killed by a car Monday 
while walking across a street near 
her home. , 
  
Former $2.95 Seller 
— While Stocks Last — 
Soft, silky fur in white, 
pink or blue. Large 18 
inches tall. Movable 
eyes. Complete with 
collar and leash. 
—Main Floor SIMMS. —2nd Floor REDUCED! Super TOY Special! 
Even our every-day low prices fur 
ther reduced. Here's a typical ex- 
ample of how much you save. 
ONLY 121 
of These 
BUY NOW! §& 
as 
Pictured 
a   SSS Se eS ee oe ee ee   
  98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor 
    
  BUY'EN F BY THE      
   
Gift Hankies 
ee 7 
White hankies with decorative em- 
  
      
      ELASTIC WAIST 
Reg. $1.29 Value 
97° Trimmed Bodice 
Paste! Colors 
Ladies’ full 
length night- 
owns with 
  
Wrinkle-Resistan \—Washable | 
Mee SS eee ee ee ee 
        
       AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC 
HEATER and 
THERMOSTAT 4 # 110-120 vous ace oc fi 
    his wife had fallen between his bed 
and her's. 
LeCroy said the heater was still 
burning and a bathroom window 
was down from the top about 
three inches. The bathroom door 
was open. 
The heater burns liquefied pe- 
troleum gas from a tank. 
The Mungers checked into the 
court Sunday night. 
An autopsy is being performed. 
The bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- 
ard Spink of Horton, were found in 
room No. 6 Jan. 23 after they had 
checked 
Spink was 72 and his wife 62. in the previous night. 
The heater was burning and the 
windows were closed when their 
bodies were found. Carbon monox- 
de poisoning was listed as the 
cause of the Spinks’ deaths.   
i1Says Upward Trend to Continue   
Le Board Optimistic DETROIT (AP)—The Detroit Board of ‘Commerce to- 
economists’ repofts indicated 
there may be all-time highs. 
  my day predicted the economic upward trend will last at least 
through the first six months of the new year. 
John R. Stewart, board statistician, said a survey pf F; 
that business activity will 
not reach the 1955-57 boom levels but that in some phases 
Stewart forecast automobile production of 5,760,600 
as against the 4,500,000 of this year, or a 28 perycent in- 
crease. Fis would be larger than the most optimistic pre-             = 
# FULLY GUARANTEED a Fe # PROT LIGHT 
& OUTSIDE CONTROL 
& WATS KEEPS WATER at we i TemereAtURE 
FLOATING SURFACE | 
FINMY FEEDER if i 
  
      
    
  dictions from the car industry iteelf. : 
bi ee ee or ie 
© CULMS AMD Pm Tees Warten 
® WATER NEVER NEEDS CHANGING eee) EES 38 save. ei 1S PIECE RUSTPROOF-LEAKPROOF-MOOERN 
eee te Uivi eaves Tee Two wii eater REFLECT 
SoS SUPPLY Fist 
od VITAMINS. 
     
    
eo All Sizes 32 to 38 
Cotton blouses with short sleeves, 
lace and velvet trimmed, chemise 4 
blouses, man-tailored collars, etc. 
All fall colors. 
Che | 98 N. sogind~ —Main Floor ; 
— a a a a ag ag 
    
  
      14: ours’ 
        
Complete with 
STAND 16.8§ 
      
         
    
pd OUTY 
ELECTRIC 
PUMP 9 Mew Design eliminator 
the need of @ belt 
® Very Migh Pressure 
with edjwstment knob 
# thech absorber mover 
Me Redic or 1.4 
oe 
# Aeretes weter 
             
   128 page 
  _ —2nd 
FLOOR 
/BROTHE RS cocemerel E og N. Saginaw ~=<Main Floor ?         SALE of Gift 
Dresser Sets 
  JS sine: 
Nresser Sets 
.. 5” Set has comb, brush, mirror 
and powder jar, in attractive 
gift box. $1 holds in layaway. 
Heart Boxed 
Dresser Sets 
$13.95 95 Keg. 97° Value $1.95 
Dacrons, nyloris, cottons . 6-piece set includes brush, § ‘ short and x length sleeves. comb, mirror, 2 powder jars 
and mirror in box. $1 holds in 
layaway. : 
SIMMS... —S° 4's '4 45 SSS, 
Box of 71% sil¥aiee 8 5° SINGLE 3 for DECKS ( 
broidery. Gift boxed for giving. Duratone finish — easy to clean j 
with damp cloth. Fancy backs. 
Ready gift boxed for Christmas 
NYLONIZED-KNIT giving. 
Ladies’ § Playing Cards 
Gowns Ge” aS 4 SS ee a 
  <_< S S 
= eS SSS SS SS ee ee 
98 N. Saginaw —Main F loor     
  ‘ 
‘ 
DURATONE | PLASTIC COATED 
Playing Cards 
$2 DOUBLE DECK $1.70 : 
‘KEM’ ALL PLASTIC 
375 7>°° 
100% all plastic cards outlast ordi- 
Bary playing cards by months. 
‘Sue We ae as Ses Re, ae, Sas es 
  2-Deck Revolving Rack 
200 Chips & Rack $6.95 Value As shown .. round 
Plastic rack with 200 
unbreakable ch ips. 
ge to hold 2 decks 
of cards. 
RTVeVe ae 
  
  
  4 Ladies’ Blouses 3 ee — 
Values 1 c AY TUES. & WED. | $1.49 Ay (ai COUR ay 4 MNOS 
    
di 
    , 
                        
                        
Enon or BAN-LON 
Hrs Sweaters 
van? Short sleeve slipovers or long 
‘sleeve cardigans. White, pas- 
tels, or dark colors     
Sie Gor Wi, a Sox Ye Ss Zs, te, One 
  Assorted Styles & Materials 
Girls’ Blouses 
All popular colors and white. 
All sizes 7 to 14 
  ——— 
SIMMS). 98 N. Sagiriaw —Main Floor |    
      
fp THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1958 | is 
      
Walpole Island 
‘Indians May Get 
Big Yule Present 
WALLACEBURG, Ont. (UPD— 
The 1,200 Indians who live oii Wal- 
pole Island in the St. Clair River|E 
Flats hope for haste from the Ca- 
nadian government so their Christ- 
mas will be merry. 
* * * ; 
Canada is completing, negotia- 
tions with the U.S. Army Corps of 
Engineers for a new shipping chan- 
nel that would cut through Squirrel 
Iskand and eliminate an “s” curve 
around Harsens Island in the flats. 
Squirrel Island is part of the 
Indian reservation and the Wal- 
pole Indians will be paid $200,000 
for giying up land fer the ship- 
ping channel. 
They plan to put $100,000 in a 
trust fund for their Indian activ- 
ties and distribute the other $100,- 
   
    
      
    000 per capita beseech) per 
person. 
* * * 
ff the government can cut red 
tape, each Walpole indian will have 
the money in time for Christmas. 
  
   SALE of METAL FILE BOXES 
Tonite and Wednesday 
      
                   
   
     
  Holds 
800 
Documents 
‘Porta-File’ 
  
   
  8-Light Tree 
String of 8 color- 
tul assorted tights. 
Series style: Limit 
2 sets. 
15-Light Multiple Set 
Bulbs burn independently. 
Has clip and add on 
plug 
ecoevecessessosesecese 
Nj 8 
EE WD DBM RBI RBIS ee ee 
Hand Painted 
Box of a 
12 For 
Imported ornaments {mn brilliant 
colors, shapes and sizes 
sortment of others, 
eccccosseesseeseseee 
Sizes for All Trees 
All-Metal Stands 
$1] Value 
719° Others 
to $1.19 
As shown— meta! 
sturdy stand 
eeeeeeseeseoeeooeeeee Big as- 
too 
   
May be used 
as a table- 
cloth, too! 
  Be Decorative 
‘AERO’ 
¥ Snow 
x Spray 
Bomb 
69° Spray for 
10-ounces. $1.00 
Value 
  trees, windows, etc. 
£4 = — 
GENERAL ELECTRIC 
Tree Light Bulbs 4 
9 for 15°? 
229 Gane fans . 2 for 87°: 
eseecseeeoeseoeeooees 
  te 
i 
10¢ Value— 
C-6 Series .. 
$c Value— 
C-7'2 Multi . 
  = 
  *S°S'S'S'S'S'SS'E CSS S'S" 
Tinsel Icicles ..... 25¢ to 49e 
Angel Hair .....> 1c & 25¢ 
Cotton Snow'......-%... 49c * 
Ornament Hangers 100 for 10c <2 
DDiDe DDB DDRII DDD HR DARD AAR?: THARP MRB DDI. 
i Tree Roping .......... 24c¢ 
: @ 7] 
DIMM sxcr5is 
y 98 N, Saginaw —2nd Floor 
Mout —n panera   
RAMALLAH RARRHBRAMWRDBRABRBI MBAR: RWB 3.2: BeBe Di DD BIRD DIB: DARMMRMMBM BMI RDPB RRR D IPT: All Metal—Lock & Key 
File Chest 
147 
As pictured— #6 all meta! file chest 
with carrying handle, indexed di- 
viders, lock and key. Limit 2 per 
customer ... for home and office. $2.69 
Value 
  ‘Porta-File’ 
ALL METAL — Lock & Key 
Check File 
938 
For HOME & OFFICE Use 
Keeps cancelled checks and bank 
statements always at your finger- 
tips Sturdy steel construction, 
easy-carrying handle 9x9x4‘9-inch 
size. Hammer-tone grey finish 
SIMMS wee $8 N. Saginaw —Z2nd Floor         
   $3.49 
Value 
   
       
        
        
  
yrecennorceceonerceren, 
¥ Tuesday and Wednesday & rs 
GIFTS FOR SPORTSMEN 
bs 
+ 
  Ideal for Sportsmen 
Hand Warmer 
Limit 2. 
i Qs Reg. $1.49 value. for hours 
EGE 1G ES SEE EEE EE NS filling lasts 
  LOCO COLELLO CLE Puohneeeerrootoi caer ero ce rr Dole oo re creer ery pe eceere rer oc aree rer cccesgc ec ese oC OS oko wr rr ry 
Never Fail—Non-Freeze 
Tip-Ups 
$1.49 ¢ 
Value 
New modern style, oll- 
treated hardwood, metal | tor 
parts plated to resist $1.89 
rust Large reel. double stabilizer, 
17” long at stands 2" above ice 
on stick. Will never freeze 
COOL LILE HOE LLL 
Genuine FISHERMAN'S 
De-Liar : Reg. $2.00 
1.68 it measures, 
24-inch  stee!, 
accurate scales 
SEE EE EE ES EE ES 
FISH pSHINEEE As Easy 
to Use 
As a 
Can 
Opener 
        
       
     
   ? $5.95 Value 
4.88 
Eliminates messy 
fish scaling. Fa- 
mous TOWNSEND 
Fish Skinner re- 
moves skin _ the 
easy way. Guaran- 
teed to work.   
              
  _ —énd- Floor a ss 
    
26D. DDeBrB.DrBsDeBiRDDR IRD: BoB DD RBI DPB. BeDs WB. B.D.B. DDD BBD BiB BMD. BD. VDD BMD BB VBE YDB B BUBB De BeBe BeBe D Be Me BeBe De DB Di Be Pe The only time some marriedjaged when he'd rather 
j¢ouples aren't arguing is when he’s |Dictaphone machine than a secre- 
apologizing . . have a 
. A man’s middle- |tary. —Earl Wilson.   
J 
4 
; 
J 
] 
f ; 
] 
: 
: 
      
   
          
      
For 6 or y VOLT coms | 
if Just hook on any convenient spot 
. . . swivel hook leaves hands free 
to do necessary work. Also use as 
safety flare in emergency on road 
—2nd Fleer 
Esimm3..": Utility Lights: “y , Psy 
$1.50 
Value      
Se 
“i      
      
     
     
    
          
      
i 
D.stinctive fones { heige anda tans e 
_ IRCT aualiiv e 1 FIRST qual ; 
shee 1 extra wed e 
qu ts e 
e 
e 
e 
PA, : im BROTHERS ¢ 
ERY —Main Floor ® e 
Aig ws eeeeeeeesseseoeeseesseeeeeseee “GP SPRAYER a a A a a 
Make Your Tome Sparkle for 
CHRISTMAS— PAINT-UP Now! 
Now at SIMMS—Lowest Price Yet on 
‘Bungalow’ Vinyl Latex 
Interior Wall Paints $5.98 Value 9 99 
price GALLON 
PAINT ROLLER 
and PAN SETS Easy to apply—with roller or 
brush — fully washabie vinyl 
jatex paint in choice of white 
er colors No limit at this 
  New... Low Priced 
ELECTRIC 
ovi PAINT 
with built-in 
motor 
$12.95 
Value 
8* 
As pictured. elec- 
tric paint spray-    er for paint, r 
ename!, lacquers, | a | | 
etc, Just plug tn- Sui sae | All metal paint pan with lad- 
to electrical out- der hooks 7-inch paint roller let and start 9% 
spraying. included 
Covcccccscseoseeeseses 
Big 9 x 12-Foot Size 
Drop Cloths For 7-Inch Rollers... 
Dynel Reiills 
ROLLER 
  
      | a 
  $1.19 Value 
Reg. ¢€ H Wax treated 
60c a paper cloths 
i to protect 
Replacement leeve \ furniture and 
for all T-inch rol CTS walls against 
lers. Limit 2 sleeves ? splatter 
  Coccccccccccccccccccee 
Full 60-Yard Rolls 
Masking Tape PANOEATER 
    Reg. 50c . 
Pak of $1.00 Value 
15 Sheets ¢ 
5° Limit 2 Rolls 
ee coment 34 -1nch width, 
grain 9 x ideal for making 
8 ts A rr 5 
Limit ft pack windows, mould- ings, etc 
SOCCHOKOHHGSeCsSeHeseoeeesoeseeovessooseoseseses 
PAINT THINNER—Gallon Regular $1] value. Best for thinning 69° 
paints, enamels, etc. Also used to 
clean brushes and clothing Limit, 2 
   98 N. Saginaw PAINT DEPT. —2nd Floor      
   
  1 
| 
| 
=    at a 
   You ‘Just Know’ You Can Depend 
on SIMMS for Super-Savings ... 
Christmas Sale ot 
Soles Piney NeEQNS 
Pe 
—at Geet Pay ENLY, 
‘ 
« a 
Syers 
BOX 
2 
  Choice of Styles 
FULL FASHION (60 Ga 15 Den.) 
or SEAMLESS (400 Needle) 
   | 
jthe Appalachian Mountains 
- pated iaiataiane initia m7 ee eee ata || | 
Gift for the MOTORIST r see 4 
For AUTOS or TRUCKS: || * |) a4 
  
            
       
     
         
   
   
    
   
        
      
       
            
   "CLC 
LISS 
   
     
i age 
a Be 
. 
i 5 » The Susquehanna Trail crosses | 
_in battlefield. Pennsylvania and the Gettysburg | 
           
If You Read Leading National Magazines, You've Seen These 
ADVERTISED at $6.95 and More. Save NOW! 
Decorated Rural Mail-Box With FREE Ornamental 
Bracket! 
1 
@U.S. Post Office Approved 
@ Standard Size—l9x8'yx6%" 
@ Black Wreught Iren Finish Regular 
a 
Pistinctive decorated top, 
brass fin ished door orna- 
ment. C ete with fiag 
—dnd 
Pe ) TP aaVaal P ) BROTHERS jaa loor 
    $8 North 
Saginaw 
       
              
          
               
    
              
     "OPEN EVERY NIGHT 
TILL CHRISTMAS! 
  
: “Only at ; SIMMS. Will $1 00 HOLD 
_ Any BINOCULAR in FREE LAYAWAY | 
With EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE! Net only will Simms hide your Binecular Gift in layaway fer $1.00 but 
you desire to exchange them for the exact binecular yeu need, 
we'll de it at ne cest te you! Check Before You Buy! 
     
     
       
    
         7x35's Individual Focus    
      
   
  lars with céated 
All around glass. 
      7x35 WIDE-ANGLE 
BINOCULARS—11 degree 
578 feet at 1000 yards 
20x50 BINOCULARS — 
Center Focus—Reg. $55.70 
8x40 WIDE-ANGLE 
BINOCULARS—Super Wide 
Just a few of many binoc 
at big discount prices 4687 find here at SIMMS — all ulars you ll             
             
       
      
  Regular $37.50 Value z| 
Zeiss type binocu- } 
lenses and prisms. (2! 
2999. 
3999 
  
  °7.50 LEATHER CASE—with Any Binocular . . . ‘1.00 
Economy Viewing With Power to Spare - 
Monoculars’ 
10° 
17" 
     
   
     COATED 
PRISM & 
“ LENSES 
Ton, $19.95 
7x35 Power .. 
Reg. $29.95 
10 x 50 Power 
Reg. $34.95 
20 x 50 Power 
Single focusing eye-piece is high-powered yet compact enough S| 
Coated lenses and prism give maxi- ~ . to be carried by sportsmen 
mum image brightness. $2 holds your choice in layaway. 
SUMAN S wore       
  98 North 
Saginaw 
Street CAMERA 
DEPT. 
: Why Pay More Than SIMMS Low Price? 4 
BUY NOW — No Charge for FREE LAYAWAY 
CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, GIRLS’, MEN’S. LADIES’ 
Ice Skates | i> BEGINNERS’ SKATES Jé : 
eee dQ 3 BOYS’ & GIRLS’ SKATES   
  
      
    
      
   leather 
white Double runners, 
shoes in black or 
Sizes 11 to 
Arco skates in hockey 
or figure blades White 
or black bids er shoes 
All il 
All leather in white Pith MISSES" FIGURES 
figure blades izes 
~ 1. Py a IES FIGURES 
ao 1.58 : “OnE HOCKEY \) Tubular hockey blades 
Black leather shoes. All 7.98 2 
sizes 1 to 5. 
MEN’S HOCKEY 
These are just a few of the many 
skates you'll find at Simms — 
check our lowest prices! yer shoes man 
des All izes White leet 
Bi shoes with tubular 
hockey bi or pal sizes 
for. men 6 to 12. 
    ; < 
f @@CSeCsCeoseseseoaeseeseesesoeseseseseeeeeeees 
For Beginners 2 to 6 Years 
SLED SKATES CCS 4 
Reg. $1.00 ¢ 
ouble runners—as shown 
Adjustable extension style 2 89" 
for childs feet 
  ar = 
  Pa 
Under-Priced at Simms 
For Men 2) 
& Women 
All Sizes 
Double bal! bearings, 
hardwood maple wheels, 
reinforced argh, leather 
shoes in white ox black    
    Main Floor al 
; " % . a 
Recrt it oeecotes «4 Crowe’ MEE Peers ee oe cenenerey 
     
le. Stats 
DBD. DB WWD WDB DDB d BHD. HIM 
    Famous BOX CHOCOLATES Luden’s 21/-Pound Box 1 69 
| Regular $2.50 ‘Season's Greetings’ 
chocolates by Ludens. Ready wrapped. 
Butter Cup Farm Butter Cup Farm $ 55 
98c Value—pound .... $1.95 Value—2 Ibs. ...... 1 
$1" 798 
Miller Hollis Dresden Miller Hollis Dresden 
$1.10 Value—pound ..... $2.20. Value—2 Ibs. ...... 
- aaj Miller Hollis Dresden $3" Miller Hollis Haviland $4 25 Ea $4.40 Value—4 Ibs. ..... $1.50 Value—Pound .... 1 
Ludens Assorted 
$3.50 Value—4 Ibs. ... Ludens Senin 
73c Value—10 os.. 
Whitmans Soft Center. .. 49¢ $1" s 
Sisco Hamilton Dl ad $3.50 Value—5 Ibs. ...... Full Pound 
Whitmans Milk Choc. $4” Whitmans Nut Ruffs 19 
Full Pound ............ , 10-Ounce Box .......... $7 < 
Whitmans Sampler 
Full Pound 2 Pound Box Seen ier 
36 Whitmans Messinger J) Le 
. 14-Ounce Box 
Ready wrapped boxes of famous chocolates—ideal gift for the 
family, mother, wife or sweethearts. Whitmans Messenger 
30-Ounce Box 
  See eee SE Se CGS See ees 
CANDY CANES 
5c Value 
6 for 
25° Striped candy 
cane pepper- 
mint. a= SSS SS =" 
               
     
   
    
           
      
        
       
   
  =. ’ 
oe = 
XC os is 
WAY MAoe ot 
ws 2 
  Thin shell candy 
flavor filling. 
2'/«-POUND JARS ...98c 
3-POUND JARS ....1.59 2 Se ee ee ee 2% = = ss SS Se     
Hard Mixes—Pound . 33c | 
50% Fillede—Pound . 35c 
39100°, Filled—Pound 39c 
y Ribbon Candy—Pound 39c 
Filled Peerless—3 '* 1.59 
Royal Cello Mix—Lb. .39c 
Luden's Satin Sweets 
2'2-pound tin . 
  
    
«ew 6 ew ee ee el wl wl UC CU Ce 
    
CREAMS and JELLS 
POP CORN BALLS ... 
bt 2s a 6 = © Bis fe es « © is fs 6 
  
  
     Ty Wot 1 Lb. . . Not 1% Lb. ...» Not 1h Lb. ~»» but— 
88 FRESH CROP — Delicious 
Mixed Nuts Cellophane Package 
  Pe VE KH HK KHOI HHH IK HK KKK KK KH 
Why Pay $2 or More? Ring style, wonderful flavor of rais- 
ins, Currants, dates, pineapple, citrus 
peel, glazed cherries, with rum and ~ 
brandy’ flavoring. In METAL CON- 
TAINER. , ee DB HB RP DIMM BIW HI D3. BB DR BHDT Di BHD 
    
       Assortment 
  Full ¢€ 
| Pound 
English walnuts,  filberts, 
cashews, almonds, Brazils. 
Sale priced. 
   ee 
ada 
       
   
             
ae 
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1958 . . 
  FOUR 
‘ AUBREY C. AINSWORTH 
Service for Aubrey C. Ainsworth, 
62, of 3800 Elizabeth Lake Rd., will 
be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday 
from Sparks-Griffin Chapel with 
burial in the Veteran’s Plot at 
Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. 
He was a driver for Morgan 
Driveaway and a member of the 
Operating Engineer's Unicn. 
Surviving is his wife, Mabel, 
Mr. Ainsworth died early yester- 
day morning after an illness of 
several months, 
ROGER DEAN 
Roger Dean, 65, of 232 Cottage 
St., died yesterday in St, Joseph 
Mercy Hospital after a brief ill- 
ness. 
A retired employe of General 
Motors Truck & Coach Division. 
he was a member of St. Vincent 
d- Paul Church and the Holy 
Neme Society. 
Surviving besides his wife, 
Madge, are two daughters, Mrs. 
August Boucher. and Miss Eliza- 
beth Dean, both of Pontiac; three 
sons, Roger B., Donald E. and 
James L. Dean, al] of Pontiac; 
and three sisters, Mrs. T. A. Sharp 
of Pontiac, Sister Hilary and Sister, 
M. Lillus, both of the Immaculate 
Heart of Mary Order. 
The Rosary will be recited at 
7:30 p.m. Wednesday from the 
Melvin A. Sehutt Funeral Home. 
Service will be at 10 a.m. in St. 
Vincent de Paul Church, with 
burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. 
HOWARD M. HAYES Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby | Areas two daughters, Alice and Frances, 
both at home; his mother, Mrs. 
Edward M. Hayes of Detroit; four 
brothers and four sisters. 
The Rosary will be recited at 
8 p.m. tomorrow at the Calcaterra 
Funeral Home, 1201 FE, Grand 
Blvd., Detroit. Requiem High Mass 
will be sung at 10 a.m. Thursday 
from St. Anthony Church, Sheri- 
dan at Farnsworth streets, Detroit 
with burial in. Mt. 
tery. 
SHIRLEY ANN KING 
Shirley Ann King, one-month-old 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jac k 
King of 269 Chandler Ave., died 
eral Hospital. She had been ili 
since birth 
Surviving besides her mother 
and father are a sister, Patricia: 
and two brothers, Donald L. and 
Jack Jr., all at home. 
Prayers will be offered at 10 a m. 
Wednesday in the Huntoon Funer all 
Home, with burial in Perry 
Park Cemetery. 
EVERETT SAYLOR 
Everett Saylor, 41, of 85 Cher- 
okee Rd., died early this morning 
at his home after a brief illness. 
Surviving are his parents, Scott 
end Viola. Saylor, a sister, Mrs. 
Edna Smith of Pontiac; and wuvo 
brothers, Eston and Elvin Saylor, 
both of Pontiac. 
Service will be held at 1:3) p.m 
Friday from the Huntoon Funeral 
Home with burial in Perry Mt. 
Park Cemetery. 
  Howard MM. 
Lowell St., 
per Hospital Detroit after a Ie:.g' 
illness, 
Before being employed by Pon- 
tiac Motor Division, he had been! 
in business with his father at the; 
Edward M. Hayes Coal Co. 
Detroit. He was a member of St. 
Michael Church. _ 
Surviving § are _ his wife, Lilian; Hayes, 59, of 59T | 
died yesterday in Har- | 
[Robert Eldred, 
  \   JAMES G. ELDRED 
ROMEO — Service for James G. 
\Eldred, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
70161 Mellen St., 
‘will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday 
‘at Roth's Home for Funerals here. | 
in Burial will be in McCafferty Ceme- 
tery, Romeo. 
James died Sunday evening as 
the result of injuries received in a 
      
\   
    OAKLAND 
PACKING HOUSE 
. Will Be Closed All Day Tomorrow 
, . WEDNESDAY 
because of the death of 
Mr. John K. Denton owner ‘and operator Olivet Ceme-, 
yesterday morning in Pontiac Gen-| 
MI. Funeral Home at 1:30 p.m. Fri- 
day. Burial will follow in West 
Deerfield Cemetery. 
Mr. Turner died Monday morn- 
ing of pneumonia at Lapeer County 
General Hospital: 
Surviving are his wife, Maggie 
of Curran; five sons, Ray, Roy, 
Joe, John and Don; four daughters, 
Mrs. Fannie Gatkie of Lapeer, traffic accident Friday night in 
Romeo. 
urviving besides the parents 
AN two brot-hers, Robert and 
| Vincent. Mrs. Ona Schalau, Oxford, Mrs. 
NORMAN R. HOLST Evelyn Cook of Lapeer; Mrs. Lena . : tw k and MARLPTTE — Service. for|Hutchen; two brothers, Fran Norman R. Holst, 55, of 6134 E.|Elmer in Curran, 29 grandchildren   and three great-grandchildren. 
SYLVESTER M. SMITH 
OXFORD—Service for Sylvester 
M. Smith of 2874 Baldwin Rd. will 
be at 2 p.m. Wednesday from the 
Bossardet & Reid Funeral Horne 
with burial in the Mt. Pleasant 
Cemetery. 
Mr. Smith died in Pontiac Satur- 
day following a short illness. ‘Marlette St., will be held tomor- 
row at 2 p.m. in the First Pres- 
byterian Church here. Burial will 
‘be in the Marlette Cemetery. 
| Mr. Holst died at his home 
‘Sunday after a short illness. 
He was a member of the First 
‘Presbyterian Church and the 
1.0.0F. No. 271 of Mariette. 
Surviving are his wife, Lola; a 
daughter, Mrs. Merle Ross of Mar- 
lette, a sister, Mrs. Victor Maslin 
of Metamora; four brothers, Al- 
bert in Detroit, Walter in Rochest- 
er, Oscar in Berkley, and George 
of Royal Oak; and two grand- 
children. 
FRANCES M. LINDSAY 
| LAPEER — Service for Mrs. 
Frances M. Lindsay, 95, will be . = ; z — 
Incld at 2 pmein the Mu Eroth| “ABI ADEE WHETSTONE 
‘ers Funeral home. Burial will be} TROY — Service for Marie Adel 
in Mount Hope Cemetery. |Whetstone, infant daughter of Mr. 
Mrs. Lindsay died Sunday efter- and Mrs. Noland Whetstone, 6790 
noon at Ferguson Convalescent;Crooks Rd., were held at 11 a.m. 
Home in Lapeer. & today at the William R. Potere 
Surviving are a son, Rock Lind-|Funeral Home. Cremation followed 
say of Lapeer; two daughters,/at White Chapel. 
Mrs. Claude Fowler, also of La-| he baby died four days after peer, and Mrs. Gertrude Greene of} hi rth at St. Joseph Hospital, 
Davison; one sister, Mrs. Viola Pontiac. 
Jewell of Vassar; five grandchil- : 
dren and 12 great-grandchildren. Surviving beside the parents are ijtwo brothers, Thomas and Luis, GLEN D. WALKER 
LAPEER — Glen D. Walker, 67, 
of 190 Mason St., died unexpectedly 
of a heart attack Monday night at 
his home. Funeral arrangements 
will be announced later by Muir 
Brothers Funeral Home, where his 
body can be seen, 
  SCOTT A. LONG at home. 
NEW HUDSON — Service® for iScott A. Long, 69, a former 
resident of New Hudson will be Deaths Elsewhere held at the Phillips Funeral Home, 
South Lyon, at 2 p.m. Wednesday. 
iBuria] will be in the New Hudson ZURICH, Switzerland UP— Prof. 
Wolfgang Pauli, Nobel prize-win- 
      Cemetery. ning Swiss physicist, died in a hos- 
Mr. Long, whe had been liv- pital here Monday after an emer- 
ing for the past eight years inigency operation for a stomach 
Pickney, died Sunday at the Vet-|ailment. He was .   
Accused Man Denies 
Stepmother's Death 
ST. JOHNS ® — Vincent Henges- 
bach, charged with murder of his 
63-year-old stepmother, took the 
stand for the first: time yesterday | 
as his trial entered its third week, | 
Hengesbach, 53, testified he haa 
no knowledge of the death of Mrs. 
Joseph Hengesbach. Her battered 
body was found Sept. 8 in a corn’ 
field behind the rural Westphalia 
home the pair shared.. 
Police believe she was beaten to 
death the weekend of Aug. 30-31. 
Hengesbach testified he was in 
Lansing at that time. 
Under defense questioning, Hen-| 
gesbach said he and his stepmoth- | 
er had spoken little to each other! 
since a 1954 disagreement er 
crop planting. | 
He said he saw nothing sre 
f i 
  | 
| | 
  in her absence since ‘‘she often 
visited relatives for extended peri- 
ods of time.” 
She was reported missing Sept. 
7 by her sister-in-law. 
Report Feild Joining 
Philip Hart's Staff   
      LANSING  — John G. Feild) 
will resign as executive director | 
lof the State Fair Employment) 
Practices Commission to join the! 
staff of U.S. Sen.-elect Philip A.| 
Hart, it was reported today. | 
Feild has been with the commis- | 
sion since its creation three years: 
ago. The commission meets to-| 
morrow in Lansing and is expected | 
to accept his resignation at that) 
time. 
Hart, retiring lieutenant gov- | 
ernor, yesterday confirmed re- 
ports that he had picked a Wash- | 
ington man to serve as his ad- 
ministrative assistant in Wash- 
ington. He refused comment on 
the Feild report. 
        eran’s Hospital in Ann Arbor aner| rt 
a long illness. DETROIT me Dr Alexander | 
Surviving are one sister, Mrs. Cruikshank, who practiced medi- 
Grace Templeton of Pickney, three) icine 41 years in Detroit, died yes- 
pieces and three nephews. ‘terday at a nursing home here. He 
, ‘was 87. 
| MRS. CHARLES A. McCLURE . * * 
’ ORCHARD LAKE — Service for) NORTHFIELD, Minn, (AP) —| 
“Mrs. Charles (Jane) A. McClure, |Dr. Tillman Sogge, a0; Lutheran | 
84, of 3648 Orchard Lake Rd., will leader and educator, died Monday | 
‘be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow atiof a heart attack. He was chair-| 
|Our Lady of Refuge Church. pinayiaan of a joint union committee 
will be in the family mausoleum for three Lutheran churc hes, for- 
in Roseland Park Cemetery, Royal mer government economist and 
Oak. jchairman of two departments at) 
Mrs. McClure died at her home, St. Olaf College, Northfield. 
iSunday after a long illness. | 
The Rosary -will be said at : (Hit 50, 000 Mark 
tonight at the Bell Chapel of t 
William R. Hamilton Co. DETROIT ( — Ford Division 
Surviving are Mrs. Earl F. John-/Ford Motor Co. says it has pro- 
/son of Orchard Lake, one grand-|duced its 50,000th four-passenger 
/son and two great-grandchildren.| Thunderbird. The car. was intro- 
duced Feb. 14. Ford said ‘‘the re- 
LEON TURNER tail value of all four-passenger 
LAPEER — Service for former/Thunderbirds represents the addi-       
  
        
ff, 
  
HE PRICE IS RIGHT! STOCK REDUCTION SALE! SAVE! SAVE! _ Our Shoes Are America’s Finest Brands 
All First Quality 69, will be held at Muir Brothers. lars to the national economy.”’ Lapeer resident Leon Turner,jtion of nearly a quarter billion dol- 
      The administrative assistant job 
went to William B. Welsh, who for 
the last two years has been a 
researcher for the Democratic Na- 
tional Committee. He previously 
spent four years on the staff of 
former U.S. Sen. Herbert Lehman 
of New York. 
  
GOP, Dem Legislators 
to Discuss Deadlock 
LANSING  — A special house 
Democratic committee will meet | 
with its Republican counterpart | 
Wednesday afternobn at the state | 
house to discuss possible solutions 
to the 55-55 house deadlock pro- 
duced by the Nov. 4 election, 
‘The committees were designat- 
ed by recent party caucuses, 
House Minority Leader Louis | 
Mezzano of Wakefield heads the | 
Democratic committee. Speaker 
George M. Van Peursem of Zee- 
land leads the Republican con- | 
tingent. 
  
Be Here 9:30, Wednesday Morning for Best Selection! 
SAVE! SAVE! 
4 All Fully Guaranteed     
Men's Jarman 
ARISTOCRATS. 
$7 4se You Save to 
$10 a Pair 
  
Special Rack 
Women’s Famous 
BRAND SHOES 
>” You Save to $10 a Pair! WOMEN’S 
GIFT SLIPPERS 
$] $188 $94 I. Miller 
Florsheim 
Andrew Geller 
Barefoot- MEN'S FLORSHEIMS | 
14°   
Dr. Reed 00 
Herbert Levine *5 You Save to $10 a Pair   Nene You Save to $10 a Pair : 
Troylings SPECIAL RACK | MEN’S LOAFERS § 
Jarman MEN’S SH OES LEATHER SOLES | 
4 ae ce Rhythm Steps 
    Serve Yourself and SAVE! You Save to $3 a Pair! Delmanette 
Women’s Guanti Sandlers 
You Save 2 Log Rollers ‘$7 a Pair T Jolene 
  
House o f 
Shoe Falues! 
  FE 2-8406 LADIES’ DESERT BOOTS Advertised in Seventeen Magazine 
  Queen Quality 
Many Other 
Famous Brands 
Over 8,000 Pairs 
From 
Which to Select Grey and Tan 
You Save $3 a Pair 
$88 
    f amous BELLO Black. Brown   You Save $5 
a Pair 1 
| 
| 
| 
  
       
  Laconians GUM-DROPS Grey, Black, Tan— 
You Save 
$3.00 a Pr. STEWART-GLENN Co.'s 
ODDS AND ENDS 
FURNITURE 
SALE WITH JUST TWO WEEKS TO GO... WE 
HAVE. FURTHER REDUCED PRICES! WE 
MUST MOVE THIS STOCK BEFORE WE 
LEAVE THIS LOCATION. 
CHECK THIS LIST! 
QUALITY PIECES at RUMMAGE SALE PRICES! MANY at '2 OFF! 
WAS NOW 
$399.50 3-Pc. Danish Mod. Sectional, All Foam Cushions. $229.50 
329.50 2-Pec. Sectional, Custom Built, Nylon Cover, 
Modern Style ............................. 199.50 
399.50 Karpen 2-Pc. Sectional, Mod. Style, Foam Cushions 209.00 
499.00 3-Pc. Curved Sectional, Custom B’ It, Foam Cushions 249.50 
59.50 Modern Lounge Chair ..._................... 29.50 
49.50 Armless Occasional Chair ....... Sa eesreane . 24.95 
219.50 Danish Sofa, Genuine Import ................. 99.00 
169.50 2-Pc. Settee and Table, Functional Modern, Foam 
Cushions ...._....... ee 89.50 
289.50 6-Pc. Genuine Rattan Group—3-Pc. Sectional, 
Chair and Tables ............... 199.50 
194.50 Extension Table, 4 Upholstered Chairs, Limed Oak 
or Blond Mahogany, Finest Quality... si... . 59.00 
629.00 7-Pc. Dining Room Set, Buffet and Hutch, Table, 
6 Chairs, Finest Morganton Cherry............... 299.50 
419.50 6-Pe. Dining Room Set, Hutch China, Extension : 
Table, 4 Chairs, Blond Mahogany....... ss... 199.00 
464.50 Mahogany Dining Room Suite by Drexel, Buffet, 
Oval Extension Table, 6 Chairs................. 299.50 
139.95 Metal 3-Pc. Dinette Set, 3-Leaf Extension ..._—_i. 79.50 
249.00 Modern Dropleaf Table, 4 Chairs, Solid Tawny Birch 174.00 
189.50 Double Dresser, Bookcase Bed, Limed Oak, Fine 
Quality ee SEBRMA hao BRHS 99.50 
299.50 60” Triple Dresser, Panel Bed, Finest Quality __. 179.50 
499.00 3-Pc. Mahogany Bedroom Suite, 12-Drawer Triple 
Dresser, 6-Drawer Chest, Panel Bed, Finest Quality 349.50 
439.50 Double Dresser, Chest and Bed, Modern Walnut... 279.00 
109.50 Odd Bedroom Chests, Lg. 5-Drawer, Walnut Finish 59.50 
259.50 Simmons Hideabed, Full Size ............... 179.00 
179.95 Sofa Bed and Chair by Kroehler .-«......... 99.50 
249.50 Maple Arm Sofa Bed and Swivel Rocker -—-—=««.-:»1149.00 
69.50 Round Mahogany Cocktail Table, Fine Inlaid Top. 24.95 
49.95 End Tables, Genuine Leather Top by Imperial... 24.95 
299.95 Kelvinator Automatic Washer  ................ 225.00 
139.00 Crib and Chifferobe ....—s—s—sc‘ian..._.......... 79.50 
29.50 Mahogany Cocktail Tables by Brandt... ........ 12.50 
49.50 French Provincial Cocktail Tables. ............. 22.50 
49.50 Torchier Lamp ___ eee ee eee eee. 24.50 
22.95 Limed Oak Cocktail Tables 8  =—s—s..... 12.50 
69.50 5-Pc. Wrought Iron Dinette with Glass Top. ..... 29.50 
29.50 Wrought Iron Beverage Cart 9.00 
89.50 Redwood and Aluminum Fold. Bridge Set for Patio 39.00 
“69.95 Folding Redwood Settee with Pads .....«sié‘(‘(‘ ‘“( 25.00 
9.95 Aluminum and Saran Folding Chair .....—s—«sii‘ . 4.00 
19.95 Wrought Iron Corner Tables, Glass Top......... 12.00 
12.95 Wrought Iron Base Hassock ...-—s............. : 7.00 
69.50 Folding Wood Bridge Set, Formica Top.......... 39.00 
9.95 2-Shelf Utility Tables with Casters  ......... 3.00 
54.50 Double Door Wardrobe, Metal with Lock........ 39.95 
49.50 5-Drawer Juvenile Chests... .s.s................ 29.00 
ODDS and ENDS of BROADLOOM CARPET 
  $388   
WOMEN’S RIPPLE 
SOLES 
pl 
         White and Brown 
$628 | 
You Save 
$3.00 a Pair 
Get Acquainted 
With This New 
Address... 
  $ 45.00 5x9 Cotton Carpet, Green... (‘sé $ 12.95 
49.50 5x12 Cotton Carpet, Blue  .=-—-.——............... 16.95 
150.50 9x12 Wool-Twist Mixture Nylon and Wool, Beige 74.50 
189.50 12x13 Wunda Plush Cotton Carpet, Beige... . . 99.00 
299.50 Bigelow Pomeroy All Wool Tweed, 15x15........ 150.00 
  
Artist’s Drawing of Our Modern Furniture Home Nearing Completion 
  After 41 years on South Saginaw St. opposite Auburn Ave., Stewart-Glenn 
Co. will move to the New Store pictured above. An extreme effort will be 
made to close-out our present stocks in order to vacate our present building 
in the shortest possible time to save the inconvenience and expense of 
moving. 
      
OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL CHRISTMAS 
86 to 96 South Saginaw Street Opposite Auburn Avenue   
  
  
    
Sin hte        THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1958 »    hae 
    
    
  
Press Photo Pontiac 
AIM AT AVONDALE — Setting their sights on the baskets at 
Avondale High tonight will be Rochester starters Bruce Ennis, 
left, and Gene Hohf. Ennis’has been the Falcons 2nd leading 
scorer with 40 points in four straight tonight. Avondale takes a 1-1 
record against its neighboring rival. 
  
Yank Hurlers Top Al: 
lier Staff CHICAGO (AP)—The New York 
Yankees pitching staff, headed by 
Whitey Ford and Bob Turley, 
again topped the American 
League in performance the past 
season. 
Official league statistics re- 
leased today show the Yankee 
staff posted a 3-22-earned run av- 
erage far ahead of second place 
Baltimore's 3.40. Ford, the chunky 
southpaw, led all individuals with 
a 2.01 mark. 
* * * 
Detroit was third with a 3.59 
average, followed by Chicago's 
3.61, Cleveland's 3.73; Boston's 
3.92, Kansas City’s 4.15 and Wash- 
ington’s 4.53. 
Trailing Ford among the _indi- 
vidual leaders were southpaw Bil- 
ly Pierce of Chicago with 2.68, 
southpaw Jack Harshman of Bal- 
timore with 2.90, right-hander 
Frank Lary of Detroit with 2.91, 
left-hander Billy O’Dell of Balti- 
more with 2.97, 
ley with 2.98 and right-hander Cal 
McLish of Cleveland with 2.99. 
* * * 
Turley was the league's only 20- 
game winner with a 21-7 recocd 
and a .750 percentage tops 
among pitchers who worked 154 
or more innings. Second to Tur- 
ley in victories was Pierce with 
17. 
Despite his great record, Turley 
again led the loop in walks with 
128, only two of which were’ in- 
tentional 
* * * 
Turley, Pierce and Lary* tied for 
  
New Lease on Life- 
for Tulsa Baseball 
TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Profes- 
sional baseball in Tulsa got a 
new lease on life last night. 
Grayle Howlett, owner of the 
Tulsa Oiler franchise of the Class 
AA Texas League, said he had right-hander Tur- | ls. Second most complete games with 19, 
while Ford was tops in shutouts 
with seven, Turley had six. 
Washifigton’s Pete Ramos, fast- 
balling right-hander, faced the 
most batsmen, 1,015, allowed the 
most hits, 277, the most homers, 
38, the most runs, 133, and started 
the most games, 37. Lary pitched 
the most innings, 260. 
* * * 
Chicago right hander Early 
Wynn was tops with 179 strikeouts 
and upped his career total to 6.037. 
Two no-hit games were record- 
ed. Jim Bunning, Detroit right- 
hander, accomplished the feat 
against Boston, July 20; and Bal- 
timore right-hander Hoyt Wilhelm, 
a National League castoff, came 
through against the Yankees ex- 
actly two months later. 
Calhoun Tames 
Tiger Jones 
CLEVELAND (AP) — Middle- 
weight Rory Calhoun can absorb 
plenty of punishment and still be 
dangerous. Ask Ralph ‘Tiger’ 
Jones.   
the early rounds of a 10-round 
bout with Jones last night, kept 
hammering away and earned a 
unanimous decision. The victory 
avenged a loss to Jones in Madi- 
son Square Garden last month. 
* * 
Larry Atkins, promoter of the 
scrap, said he had offered Carmen 
Basilio $15,000 to meet the winner. 
However, the former welterweight 
and middleweight champion did 
not say whether he would accept; 
the match. 
The 24-year-old Calhoun of; 
White Plains, N. Y.,                 reached agreement with the Tulsa 
Fair Board under which -he will) 
have use of Texas League park | 
rent free for three gs 
In return, * Howler said he must | 
finance repairs to the stands. Fire 
officials recently condemned part 
of them as unsale. 
  
  ( 
          HE'LL ENJOY 
King 
Edward AMERICA'S 
LARGEST SELLER 3 
lnvincible Deluxe 2/15¢ 
Imperial 6¢ Cigarillo §/20¢ 
“DEAN BROS. DISTRIBUTORS ot 8. ‘Saginaw § St., Eentise- lat       |State and Michigan Tech came in 
In National Spotlight 
lie Greene, undefeated Providence 
middleweight, 
into national prominence by stop- vies 
ing, Johnny Saxton, 
world welterweight ‘champion, 
the third round of their scheduled 
'10-rounder Monday night. Jones in the sixth, seventh and 
10th rounds, although he had trou- 
ble seeing because of the cuts. 
3 State Puck Teams 
Blasted by Alumni 
DENVER (UPI) — Three Michi- 
gan hockey squads have been 
termed unsportsmanlike for refus- 
ing to play the Denver University 
hockey team. 
The blast at Michigan, Michigan   
a resolution by the Big Ten Club 
of Colorado yesterday. 
The club, made up of former, 
/memrbers of colleges and univer- 
, sities in 
drafted the resolution asking the 
three Michigan schools and Minne- the Big 10 conference, 
sota to schedule hockey games 
with the Denver squad immediate- 
ly. 
  
  PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)—Wil- Calhoun, cut near both eyes in| 
staggered | | 
land other groups to meet tonight [7 Games on Prep Slate Tonigh J 
  
Falcon, Avon - 
Clash Features 
Area Schedule Oxford at Clarkston; 
Maples vs. Southfield, 
Waterford Away 
By CHUCK ABAIR 
Some _— scatered interesting 
games of the non-league variety 
headline tonight's final Tuesday 
basketball program for prep teams 
until after the Holiday season, 
The annual Rochester-Avondale 
clash, Oxford at Clarkston, Bir- 
mingham at Southfield, Waterford 
at Dearborn Fordson and Ferndale 
at Berkley feature a 17-game 
| schedule, 
Rochester rates much stronger 
on paper on the basis of its far 
superior personnel and a perfect 
4-0 record but the Falcons will 
be only a slim favorite on the 
Avondale court. 
Anything is likely to happen 
when such formidable foes get to- 
gether. Rochester has dominated 
the past games between the schools 
but has been pushed hard on most 
occasions. The Falcons won 40-30 
and 50-43 last winter. 
* Le Bae 
Coach Gene Konley has such 
boys as Gene Lothery and Chuck 
Ebersole back who helped spark 
the sweep a year ago. Lothery is 
currently the leading point-getter 
with 55. Gary Acker tops Avon 
with 27 for a 1-1 slate. 
The game at Clarkston will 
serve as an excellent tuneup for 
both schools, Clarkston, 2-1, will 
be prepping for a big Friday in- 
vasion by Northville while Ox- 
ford, 1-2, meets chief foe Orton- 
ville Friday, 
Oxford is going all out for a big 
year in an attempt to shake the 
losing doldrums of recent years. 
It has one of the sectors top per- 
formers thus far in Doug Stott. He 
has 55 points in three games. 
Newcomers Bill Powell and John 
Parks have led the Wolves. 
Birmingham will be making only 
its 2nd appearance. The other was 
last-minute triumph over Royal 
Oak Dondero. Southfield is 2-1 
Waterford, which lost a heart- 
breaker at Southfield last Friday 
with an upset in its grasp, will be 
on the road again seeking its ini- 
tial victory for the 3rd time. 
Berkley will put an unbeaten 
mark on the line and will have 
the advantage of three ‘games un- 
der its belt to.Ferndale’s one—a 
loss to Southfield. , 
Flint Northern at Lansing Sex- 
ton, Grosse Pointe at Mt. Clemens 
and Lapeer’s lst home game 
against Flint Kearsley will be other 
Class A games, 
Troy hosts Lakeview, Van Dyke| 
travels to Center Line, Warren is 
at Clawson, Brighton goes to Flint 
guest of Clarenceville, Lakeville is 
at North Branch, Farmington Our 
Lady of Sorrow at Rogal Oak St. 
Mary, Royal Oak Shrine meets) 
mighty Ausin and Oak Park in- 
puades L’Anse Creuse in other ac- 
tion.             
Campus Committee 
Helps Find Coach 
WACO, Tex. (AP)—Baylor Uni- 
versity’s search for a new foot-; 
ball coach and athletic director 
gets underway formally tonight. 
The faculty athletic committee 
has invited ex-students, letterman 
and to form a committee to act in 
an advisory capacity to the facul- 
ty committee. 
* * * 
The Birmingham, Ala., News! 
said yesterday that Jerry Clai-| 
borne, 29, assistant to University 
of Alabama football coach Paul 
Bryant was being considered for, 
the Baylor coaching job. 
Claiborne said he had not been 
contacted by Baylor officials but 
said “I definitely would be in- 
terested.”’ 
  
NEW ORLEANS—Arthur Persley, 135% 
Red Cross. La. outpointed Ludwig Light- 
burn, 13744. British Honduras. 10 
OTTAWA—J. D. Ellis, Trenton, NJ. 
outpointed Davey Dupas. New Orleans. 10 
                      projected himself 
two - time - 
in| 
  
new Chevy is the best | 
morrow with my car 
and make a deal be- 
\_ fere Christmas.” 
———— 
Oakland County's Largest 
Chevrolet Dealer! 
!     
34 MILL ST. | "... thet deal Matthews-Har- 
greaves just made you on that 
seen. I'm coming back to- 
  ‘ve 
    
        
  FE 5-4161      BOSTON—Paul Pender. 160. rookline, 
ese stopped Petey Adams. 168, New. ark, NJ 
CLEVELAND —_ Rory Calhoun, 158% 
Plains. NY., guspomted Ralph 
Jones, 154. Yonkers. 10 
NEW YORK—Benny Paret 153%). Cuba, P™ ba 
.|mire’s, 7 p.m, 
    
  
    B & 
      
{This is one of a series of articles 
explaining basketball plays to use 
against the zone defense.) 
By BUNNY. LEVITT 
Written for AP Newsfeatures 
Beating all types of zone de- 
fenses is what every high school 
and college basketball coach would 
like to see his boys do. Of course, 
this takes a lot of planning. 
use against almost any zone. By 
1-3-1 we would have a man, let’s 
call him No, 5, stationed to the 
right of the basket just outside the 
foul line, - 
No. 2, 3. and 4 would take 
starting spots across the court in 
back of the foul line. No. 1 
would start the play from well 
out by passing to No, 4 near the 
right sideline. 
No, 4 then passes the ball to No. 
3 who has moved to his right. No. 
but passes to No. 2 or No. 5. 
After 3 has received the ball from 
No. 4, players 2, 3 and 5 form a 
triangle. Originally, 2, 3 and 5 
were well spread out away from 
the zone defense. No. 2 usually 
has an opening on this type of 
play and should be the team’s best 
shooter from outside. 
* * * 
Rebound assignments for this 
‘setup would be: 
Erdelatz Denies 
Offer by 49ers   
Navy Mentor Evades 
Job if Offered Him 
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) 
give you my word of honor,”                 | Navy football coach Eddie Erde- 
lat, “they have not contacted) 
me” about being coach of 2s 
{San Francisco 49ers. 
* * 
The successful * 
Navy mentor’s| 
Mandeville, Wyandotte Schaffer is} name has been bandied about for | 
the San Francisco job which 49er_ 
coach Frankie Albert has quit. 
What if he is offered the job?) 
Erdetatz wouldn't say what on 
reaction would be. 
“1‘don’t want to get involved in 
anything,’ he said, so I don't, 
want to say any more about it.) 
The less I say in a situation like! 
this the better off I am.” 
* x * 
Erdelatz has been coach at the, 
Naval Academy nine years, a 
span in which his teams have won! 
50 games, lost 26 and tied 8&8. | 
Both Erdelatz and his wife ares 
from California where he*was an, 
assistant coach of the professional 
49ers before coming to Navy. 
Sports Calendar TUESDAY'S ATHLETIC EVENTS 
High School Basketball 
Waterford at Dearborn Fordson 
Rochester at Avondale 
Oxford at Clarkston 
Brighton at Flint Mandeville 
Wyandotte Schafer at Clarenceville 
Ferndale at Berkley 
Birmingham at Southfield 
Van Dyke at Center Line 
Warren at Clawson 
Lakeview at Troy 
Lakeville at North Branch 
    
  Flint Kearsley at Lapeer 
St. Clement at OL St. Mary 
Parmington OLS at RO 8t. Mary 
RO Shrine at Austin Catholic 
Oak Park at L'Anse Creuse 
Grosse Pointe at Mt. Clemens 
Flint Nerthern at Lansing Sexton 
High Scheol Wrestling 
Parmincton at Hazel Park 
Hich School Swimmin 
Pontiac Nerihers at Pontiac fentral 
City League Basketball 
CLASS C — Oliver Buick vs. Wingle- 
and Vikings vs. Town & 
Country, 8°30 'p. m., at Jefferson 
CLA: — Eastside Shopping vs 
and jas ar : 
  Pledges (National), 7 pm, 
vs Pontiac Northern fAmerican},                         —oo Victor Zalzar. 157'. Argentina. 
p.m. | A 1-3-1 offense is a-good one to ; 
3 then pivots towards the basket! . oping lead during the past week 
"led once for the 400th goal of his 
1 
2. 
3 
4. 
3. 
| 6 
te 
8 
9 
6. 
Reaction to Coaching 
“T 
said: No, 2 covers the left side. 
No. 5 takes the right side, 
No, 3 takes the front of the bas- 
ket. 
No. 4 covers the foul line, 
No. 1 must be a good guard to 
prevent the fast break should the 
opposition break up the play or 
gain possession on the rebound. 
  
Boom Boom in 
_ NHL Top Spot 
(AP) -— Bernie 
“Boom Boom” Geoffrion, the 
Montreal Canadiens’ out-spoken 
wingman with a blistering shot, 
took over undisputed possession of 
the National Hockey League's MONTREAL 
with three goals and assisted in 
two other tallies. 
cluded the hat trick, gave him 17 
goals and 22 assists for 39 points, 
two more than Andy Bathgate, the 
New York Rangers’ smoothie who 
shared the lead with the Montreal 
ace last week. 
Wings’ veteran right-winger count- 
;|NHL career in regular season 
play, and came up with three as- 
sists, 
The scoring leaders: 
. Geoffrion, Montreal 
. Bathgate, New York 
Howe. Detroit 
y & 
RRRRVBBBSB; Moore, Montreal 
Nh erty Detroit 
M.Richard, Montreal 
Beliveau, Montreal 
Spree bf Chicago 
H_ Rich: Montrea) 
Murphy, Chicago 
Strikes and Sane 1 
  Rooney Insists 
Pittsburgh Will 
Geoffrion’s production, which in-| 
Five points back, with 32, is De-. 
troit ace Gordie Howe. The Red)! Keep Steelers 
PITTSBURGH (® — The presi- unior Cage Results 
; Dragons 26, Trotters :18   
  
WEEKEND SCORES 
Globetrotters 6, Roughriders 4 
Little Beagars, i. Hounds 12 Siding ELLs Inc. artans obetrotters ; : 
Firing ri 6, All-Stars 2 @ Maral SINCE 1945 aiders sorepplitng A-86 : 
Stompers 42, C FE 2-26 71 Spee ede. 18, ery ods 16 le Siding” & 
Jokers $4, Panthers 12 ing FREE ESTIMATES 
  wr BIG DEAL e hie.    
  Little Stars 28, Falcons 27   
W. Angels 18 Wings   
Ramrods 32, Knights 24 
Royals 36, Jets 1 
H. Millers 38, Shamrocks 28 
Steelers 33, Comets 2 
Panthers cay Pistons 12 
Speedballs 12, Warriors 6 
Hot Rods 16, Screwballs 12 
Sherwood's Pive 24, Cyclops 20 
Spartans 36, Black Hawks 18 
Globetrotters 22, panes 19 
Dead Eyes 37, Wil 384 
Lions 12, Sharows ve 
_Gelties 4 44, ‘Bulldogs 9         
dent of the Pittsburgh Steelers 
has repeated his intention of 
keeping the club’s National Foot- 
ball League franchise here de- 
spite a drop in attendance for 
home games. ' 
Art Rooney last night branded 
“absolutely untrue” a story a 
Pittsburgh sports writer said was 
printed in a Miami newspaper 
that Reoney might transfer the 
franchise to the Florida city, ; 
Reports that the Steelers might 
move to other cities have been 
frequent in recent years. Rooney 
has denied them all, 
“We're doing business at the 
same old stand,” he asserted, 
adding: 
“We have a winning team and 
a top coach now, and I feel sure 
the fans will support them, My 
one hope is that the weatherman 
treats us better in 1959." 
Arizin in 2nd Spot         
‘Among NBA Scorers 
NEW YORK (AP) — Philadel- 
phia’s Paul Arizin, a two-time 
National Basketball Assn. scoring 
champion, has moved into second 
place behind Bob Pettit of the 
St. Louis Hawks in the point-pro- 
duction parade. 
* * 
Arizin. who won the title in 
1951-52 and 1956-57, has accounted 
for 638 points in 25 games for al 
25.5 average. The Warriors’ jump- 
shooting specialist also ranks fifth 
in the all-time scoring standings 
with 9,909 points. 
Figures released by the league | 
today show that Pettit retained   * 
      
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  12-16       
By JOE WILMAN 
A great many bowlers have a 
mistaken idea about when they 
should release the ball. Some feel 
they should let go as the forward| 
swing reaches the bottom of its 
arc and is closest to the alley’s 
surface. Others feel they should 
throw it way out on the alley bed. 
Actually, the ball should be re- 
leased as the armswing starts up. 
The ball should be sent out over 
the foul line with the fingers sup-                     plying the lifting motion. This fin-| 
ger lift also provides the necessary | 
stuff which makes the ball hook 
when it nears the pins. 
If the ball is released at the! 
bottom of the arc, it will strike! 
_the approach before it crosses the | 
foul line. It should never touch the 
j approach, but should be sent out 
and over the foul line with the| 
lifting motion of the fingers. It 
ican land anywhere from a few} 
inches to a couple of feet beyond 
the foul line. 
After releasing the ball, continue 
your armswing to a perfect follow- | 
| through, such as that shown in the 
, drawing. 
(Copyright 1958, John F. Dille Co. )   
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    THE PONTIAC PRESS, _TUESDAY DECEMBER. 16, 1958   
Funds to Restore Island Further   
Detroit Firm Gets Mackinac Bid —'A spread ‘of 45 
B anistvorp two 3 bidders on a 75,$000 
bond offering by the Mackinac 
Island State Park Commission. 
‘As a result, Watling, Lerchen Both the bidders yesterday of- 
fered 544 per cent on a 15-year 
revenue bond issue, and offered 
to buy at par. But the Detroit 
firm, in addition, offered a 45 pre- ized by the 1958 legislature, ihe 
commission, between June 15 and 
Sept.30, took in $54,322 in Fort 
Mackinae admissions. 
Hot Springs Heat Homes, Because first issue bonds were 
dated Aug. 1, 1958, restrictions 
on handling of income previded 
in the bond resolution did not 
become effective until that date. 
The commission authrized the 
National Bank of Detroit, where 
its bond reserve funds are on de- 
posit, to invest 13,750 in§$ one- 
year U.S. Treasury certificates 
paying about 3% per cent interest. 
It decided to buy a newspaper 
clipping service estimated to cost 
not more than 100 a year. 
After the bond sale, Potter 
described the commission's secur- 
ity as a ‘real good'’ bond ‘‘lu- 
crative for individuals” although 
SS , (not attractive to mose financial 
- | institutions. 
-| James P. Dunnigan of West 
=|Branch, commission vice chair- 
“|man, and Dr. Alfred H. Whittaker 
—|of Grosse Pointe, a commission More Santa Letters | S.ise2"Ss Here is another list of Pontiac area youngsters : terest in buying, a few of the bonds 
who have written letters to Santa Claus and mailed | |{" ‘emselves. them to The Pontiac Press. < . All the letters have been delivered to Santa Claus, Bulg anin Ouster 
‘From Party Seen mium. 
H. E. Potter, representing Wat- 
ling, Lerchen & Co., figured that 
ever their lives the bonds, as- 
suming they go to maturity, 
would return total interest of 
$57,376. 
The bonds are callable, subject 
to premium payments graduated 
downward with the elapse of time. 
* * * 
Last summer, Stifel Nicolaus, as 
the only bidder, bought 50,000 in 
commission bonds to get th$e im- 
provement program started. & Co., of Detroit, rather than Stifel 
Nicolaus Co. of Chicago, will fur- 
nish the money for second stage 
improvements intended eventually 
to make the Michigan tourist lure 
rival Williamsburg, Va. 
The commission, which start: 
ed fixing up Fort Mackinac last 
spring and installed a museum, 
Plans with the money to 
further dress up the historic site. 
Dioramas using mannikins and 
colorful 18th century costumes are 
to be placed in the fort and asso- 
ciated buildings to help the visito 
visualize typical pioneer scenes.   Through charge of fees author- 
    
    
and Mrs. Santa is busy opening them and telling Sete and his helpers just what each boy and girl wan e 
  
      
erage ‘‘swizzle sticks.” 
similar to the oil of poison ivy; 
of the menace.   BEWARE — Voodoo is taboo. That's the word from the U. S 
Public Health Service. Under scrutiny are Haitian voodoo dolls 
carved from cashew nut shells — sold mainly in the form of bev- 
The heads of the doll 
the eyes are believed to be lethal 
jequirity beans. Tula Brocard of the Public Health service shows   
UAW Conduct of Affairs 
Praised by Review Board DETROIT W—Fhe United Auto 
Workers Union has been praised 
ifor the conduct of its internal 
union affairs by the first report of announced purpose of making wore 
that if there was any taint 
scandal in the UAW. the doard 
vould uncover ‘it. : 
its ‘“‘watchdog”’ review board. 
The seven-member public board, 
appointed by the UAW a year and 
a half ago to keep an eye on 
union family affairs, issued its 
first report to UAW President Wal- 
ter Reuther yesterday. At the time the UAW acted con- 
gressional investigations of union 
racketeering was at a high pitch. 
The UAW made public the re- 
view board's findings in a-repeort. 
Rabbi Adler's comments were con- 
tained in a preface to the report. 
The cases which the board said 
it studied included suspensions 
of lecal union officers and 
grievances at shop levels where 
decisions had been appealed by 
union member complainants to 
the UAW’s international execu- 
tive board. The review board has 
ruthority to reverse the union 
board. 
“None of the cases we dealt 
with and to which we gave our 
serious attention and study te In no case that came before it 
were there ‘any findings of 
corruption,” said a letter from 
Rabbi Morris M. Adier of De- 
troit, board chairman. 
Adler also told Reuther ‘our ex-| 
perience in these last 18 months 
has proved that the UAW is free; 
from corruption and gross perver- 
sion of the democratic pro- 
cedures.” 
The 1,500,000-member auto union 
named the review board for the     
Moms in Prison 
Get Help Playing 
‘Santa Claus 
CHICAGO (AP) — Santa Claus 
will bring toys to children of the 
/51 mothers who are among the in- 
;mates at the State Reformatory)| i 
for Women. Commission charges of illegally 
The Salvation Army, for the first|COmbining to restrain trade and 
time on an experimental basis, has| monopolize the advertising of con- 
stepped in to help  imprisoned|Struction equipment makers. 
mathers play Santa to children 12) The publishers and the associa- 
and under. tion denied all accusations in the 
re n * FTC complaint lodged last Oct. 21. 
Representatives of the Salvation They pias acused of: 
Army visited the prison at Dwight 1 Limiting membership to one 
over the weekend with samples of publication many Siven area and 
14 different toys. Mothers could locating territories, 
choose which they wanted, sign the) 2: Agreeing on prices and dis- 
tags and supply addresses of their) Counts for advertising space; Building Publications 
Deny FIC Charges 
troit, and its 15 member publishers 
of construction industry trade pa- 
pers have denied Federal Trade 
  
AP Wirepheoto 
  s contain a liquid. 
  flect evils in -the basic structure 
of/of the union or the conduct of its 
affairs," Rabbi Adler said. 
Rabbi Adier also said the UAW 
‘is to be commended” for having 
set up the public board and that 
the board was “impressed by the 
spirit and discipline” of the union. 
Some of the decisions of the 
UAW executive board were set 
aside by the review board, 
Rabbi Adler said. He said that 
in each jnstance the decision 
was “consistently respected.” 
Serving with Rabbi Adler on the 
board are Magistrate J. A. Hanra- 
han of Windsor, Ont.; Msgr. 
George C. Higgins of Washington, 
director of the social action de- 
partment of the National Catholic 
Welfare Conference; Circuit Judge 
Wade H. McCree of Wayne County; 
Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam of the 
Methodist Church, and Dr. Edwin 
E. Witte, economist and indus- 
trial relations expert of the Uni- 
versity of Wisconsin. 
  
  
WASHINGTON (® — Associated |. 
Construction Publications, of De-|}   
    
   DORIS RICHARD 
DAY _ WIDMARK ; 
ParamountPresents . 
  
    
  | youngsters. The 51 women have a) 3- Using the association to get 
      
Hollywood Headlines   
    ; Karen McCarrick Dianne Darusti Janet 
? Joey Lessard Tommy eat Stevie Barnfatwer 
2 Judy Lessard Johnny Linda Gronsky : Bobby Lesa vid Gronsky 
Cathy Lessard Kenny Harris Debra Campbell Louie Lessard Tim Wall Diane Campbell! Red Central Committee Geol oe Billie cords Decker Gary Pr ooda | er ibson | 
Kathie Lisa Marion Methner Cinds Baincome Meets, Expect ed to 
Robin Lisac Hilda Pisher Patricia McAmis - a ogy patricia McAm Expel Ex-Premier Kimberly Anderson Terry Minor Debra Suckow : 
Timothy Anderson ndra Minor Brad Sexton 
Susanne Sayers Elsie Minor Mike Furguson ©} MOSCOW (UPI) — The Commu- : Greg Siple enny Michael Brown mi. ; 2 : 4 Lin Lewis Lynne Thom Larry Sword nist Party’s Central Committee 
try Graham Bobbie Thompson Kathy Spann i eater : 
i Suzy Debra Bouchard Margaret Midkitr yjmet today amid western specula : menae Presnell 7 Ricky —- Rap y aleader @|tion it was about to oust former 
3 Roe iy J Pra : eect i, ; Valerie Welkie — ety oats vereey ~ *|premier \Nikolai Bulganin from 
3 Sandra Garcia Ricky Mason Teddy Hagbe ~| party ranks. 
4 Keith Clifton ics Omen Rabare Live: ; - ars ober & =< 
; posh Clifton Tommy Smith ar “Arellano 5 Last =fiagg aS was bates 
: udy raner as premier and was suc¢ 4 we Lindse Johnson Debbie Dick 
: Sus Grats y Steven Johnson Daniel Eriksen Bs by Nikita Khrushchey who is also Lengers mmy owar athleen ac ie Comm: 
: Freda Louise Howard Nancy Carter the unist Party leader. $ Gregory: Agait Den Howerd Conn Carter Bulganin has already been re- a r yin ‘ene r 
4 Warren Turner Kent Boylan Steve Carter moved from the presidium, or 
2 Davy Russell Judy Edwards rter oo body, of the central 
. . Since then, he has been linked | 
with the ‘‘anti-party group’”’ of for- 
Drawn Into East-West Struggle Bee eee Cale 
and Vyacheslay M. Molotov, for- 
mer deputy premier Lazar Kaga- 
novich and Dmitri. Shepilov, for-) 
mer foreign minister. | 
Observers noted that there has 
been no official announcement 
that any of the anti-party group 
had been expelled from the party Shops in Iceland’s Capital 
WASHINGTON — In many re- paratively little. The highly liter- lit w By BOB THOMAS 
AP Movie-TV Writer 
          spects Iceland lives between two|ate people of present-day Iceland 
worlds—the East and the West,/ 1.4 the Eddas about as easily as the modern and the medieval. an Englishman reads Shakespeare. 
The islanders also live between Iceland publishes more books per 
wear of hot a oa capita than any other country in 
egests, the world. abundance of ice, locked in enor- 
mous glaciers. But it is warmed . 
by water carried north from the 
Gulf Stream, and bubbling there 
are some of the hottest springs in 
the world. The word GEYSER 
comes from the Icelandic. 
Hot springs heat homes in 
Reykjavik, capital of the coalless 
country, The springs also’ warm 
hothouses where bananas, itself. 
The Central Committee meeting 
started yesterday. It was high-| 
lighted by a bitter blast by Khrush-| 
chev at Bulgafin and the other 
anti-party members whom he} 
called ‘‘a ‘despicable group of! 
wretched splitters."’ | 
Khrushchev blamed the group for, 
attempting to sidetrack agricultur- 
al policy and opposing the interests | 
of the people. 
Stop Discounts x * * 
The Icelanders have traditionally 
been a hospitable and friendly peo- 
ple, Everybody is called by his 
first name, A foreigner who asks 
directions in Iceland is likely to 
get invited home for dinner,   
    
Homemaking was part of the. hoop-de-do for the) 
world premiere of “‘The Bucca- 
neer,”’ which. also happens to be 
about the Battle of New Orleans. | 
The publicity mind never sleeps, 
and the Paramount boys had a 
ball with this one. 
k * 
The premiere party, led by ac- 
tress Inger,Stevens and alee 
Henry Wilcoxen, was carried to 
the Chalmette battle site by the 
  
  today were under ordérs to baby 
the 2,500 state-owned cars as they 
would their own. 
k ke 
State Controller James We Miller 
sent out the directive yesterday in 
confirming that the state won't be 
buying any new cars “in the imme- 
diate foreseeable future.” ic Society says, Geographically it 
belongs to Europe and was linked 
to Denmark until 1944, 
EARLY EXPLORER 
A hardy son of Iceland, Leif 
Ericson, is believed to have 
reached America five centuries be- 
fore 1492, and many Icelanders 
have followed him to the New 
World, settling primarily in Can- 
ada. The toy manufacturers of the 
U.S.A. say more than 21 million 
toy cooking and housekeeping 
utensils will go to little girls this 
Christmas. These miniature ap- 
pliances and utensils will account 
for approximately $63 million of 
the $1,575,000,000 toy industry’s 
anticipated 1958 business. 
Easy preparation of tasty, 
tempting cakes, pies and cookies 
has been simplified in the child’s 
world just as it has been for aduks 
by prepared mixes. The state declared a mora- 
torium on new car purchases 
when auto companies announced 
they would no longer allow spe- 
cial discounts to states on new 
car purchases. The automakers 
complained two states had used 
“objectionable"’ practices in dis- 
posing of their cars for resale. * * * 
Iceland belongs to the North At- 
lantic Treaty Organization. Though 
American forces guard the Kefla- 
vik airport, the country maintains} Some baking sets are sold with 
_close economic ties with the Soviet! small boxes of these mixes as an 
Union. ladjunct to cake tins, cookies sheets 
Much of Iceland's fish goes be-;and utensils. Other sets of alum- 
hind the Iron Curtain. Icelanders|inum or aluminum and copper are run their ca gasoline from/|exact copies of those sold in the 
the Baku oflelds adult housewares department. out. 
The inffax of American mili. | Cooking sessions are naturally t+ *« * 
tary personnel, which began dur- | followed by a clean-up period. | The Assn. of State Purchasin ing World War II, has both stim- | To make this task fun there are Agents, he said, plans to confer 
sets of brightly colored plastic 
dish pans and drying racks as 
well as small boxes of soap 
powders and miniature  dish- 
cloths. 
As sometimes happens the guests 
drop crumbs during the party 
which calls for cleaning sets of 
pastel colored brooms, sweepers, 
mops and dustpans and makes 
tidving up fun. The sweepers 
really work and so do the mops ulated and disturbed the island. 
From a pastoral fishing econo- | 
my, Iceland has moved swiftly 
into the modern world. But prog- 
ress has not been even: a shiny 
new Cadillac or Zim may have 
te travel on a dirt road. 
* * bg 
Fish and fish products have al- 
ways made up the bulk of Ice- 
land's exports. The banks off the 
island are so rich in marine life 
that trawlers from Britain and/and brooms. 
other countries come to fish there.| For barbecues or cookouts a 
Disputes have periodically arisen do}ly's hostess closet includes more 
over fishing rights. than 20 different items. 
The Icelanders, now numbering policy. 
March,”’ he said. 
Meanwhile, he told agency 
heads in his directive, ‘It be- 
comes more important than ever 
to make prudent use of every 
car and observe all rules of good 
maintenance.” 
          iployes of ‘‘drastic action” 
              Miller estimated Michigan would' 
be forced to boost its yearly new) 
car budget about $500,000—or $500, 
a car—if the policy were carried 
with the auto firms in an effort to| 
“modify or rescind’ the new 
“But we don't expect anything 
definite on that till February or 
Miller also warned state em- 
against 
‘anyone who uses a state car for 
personal affairs. Paramount Helps British 
Lose New Orleans Again 
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Well,| 'their bright uniforms; 
was a tough fight, but the Red- eve" & P 
lcoats lost the Battle of New Or- from Heck.’ 
leans again. | The Americans hugged the levee 
pir fire while the Red-| They tried. but the cards were and held their ; 
stacked against them. So, with a Coats charged forward with their’ HILLSDALE vw — Patrick Flan- 
ruffle of drums and a sound of wooden muskets tipped with rub- nery, 18-year-old Hillsdale College 
trumpets, they retreated, * carry- ber daggers. Bang! bang! bang! freshman, has been bound over to 
ing along the wounded. Exhaust. The attackers didn’t have a the January term of circuit court) 
ed, they went home to bed. chance. for trial in thesslaying of his 
The re-enactment of the Battle| a . roommate, Thomas Neitling, 21. = | ee ~ = . ere she 
of New Orleans by 400 Cub Scouts) British, retreat!’ shouted an phe Berkley youth, charged with; ‘adult Redcoat, There were 
soldiers all over, but the only real 
Ce 
ib 
cracker for sound effects. 
Soviet Pilot Returns 
4 Belgian Explorers   
  TODAY “HARRY BLACK | _ AND THE TIGER” | “ONCE UPON A HORSE”   
  
  
  ee ___|total of 110 children, from 6 4dvertising for themseives and di-| 
‘months to 12 years old. jvert it from competitors. | te t The publishers’ reply sen 
The Army plans to provide the said there are more than 35 re- 
toys, wrap and mail them. No one gional construction publications | 
j would know what place they came eg country and denied that their, trom 9 journals accounted for 90 per 
They would be, to the child’s| con pty ine jadver timing placed. | 
knowledge “to my darling angel | All the publishers asked dis- 
from mother,” as one woman) ai ol a le 
blue-coated regulars. The Red- signed a There is a town named Oceana 
coats were equally impressive in| jin landlocked West Virginia. 
tre ss January Trial Set ———_——__, “Ladi   
latoon of kilted 
for Berkley Youth 
  dead first degree murder, appeared for | 
examination yesterday and then 
was remanded to jail without bond. 
Neitling, an upperclassman from, asualty was a den leader who 
nurned his fingers lighting a fire- 
x, 
    
  —PLUS— 
     
          j Tec umseh, was beaten to death in 
ithe room he shared with Flan-| 
nery. Police said Flannery admit-! i 
|ted he beat Neitling with a gun.     
ROBERT TAYLOR - CYD CHARISSE-LEE 1 COBB 
Be BOT . tocar mrecne       
    
  
while the latter slept but could | 
nn explain his action. 
  
    India’s culture is one of the old-| 
  
  
      a roses, and carnations : ! BRUSSELS (A)—A Soviet vam 
pe , Toys Best Bet : r civic yacht Good seen o ne found four Belgian explorers ake est in the world, going back nearly’ 
: of : : Or a e ars only trouble came when the Good) oy ashed in the antarctic and flew 5,000 years. 
The hot lava and smoke for Little Girls Soe tried to dock Near 8 (hem back to their home base 
Mount Hekla, a periodically active — idredger, lost a propeller in the today. | 
teins Ligon: a okee ' ; Ask Michigan Employes jiatter's cable and came within @) aroccow radio said. “All four Everything for the 
in mediev: es 0 existence; Little Miss Polly Pigtails is quite foot of drifting into the dredger’s 4, poe 
of hell. | aware of satellites; but, neverthe| t0 Baby Autos, Since yr the mayor ain't goin’ to are We CHRISTMAS PARTY 
The Kentucky-sized island repub-|less, her primary interest is in They Have to Last llike that,’ a crewman observed) as dour are qmenibers of Whe Tricks — Jokes — Novelties 
Sidtay. oe onal cn bee oi she me seve * * * : 3elgian expedition taking part Pipers Magazine Outlet j 
Jhaghbede : . greater portion of her _ es, The welcome party waited in jn the International Geophysical] 35 Auburn Ave. FE 4-8240 Greenland, the National Géograph-| imitating her mother’s daily tasks. LANSING @ = slate employes the chilly air of the dock while year. They took off Dec. 6 to es-| The New Screen 
ithe civic sailors tried to figure a tablish a scientific station. They’ Musical In 
way to get ashore. The greeters crash-landed their small plane in) 
included a covey of bare-shoul- the Crystal Mountains. FAMILY NIGHT Gorgeous Color 
dered Southern belles who wore : + A + ‘“ . By The 
ball gowns, red sashes and ae The nearest large expedition, ay Composers Of 
pimples. The girls shivered and y,. the Soviet one at Mirny, | Ply Fenady: 
tne Visitors ated wa two ea which sent two search planes., | $ 25 / . 
ers were heid together lor €gress; 4 note in the crashed plane said| mi Starring . * erson 
over the prow of the Good Neigh- in. men had set out to walk 80 Leake Garon bor. By this time, the battle was| 
under way, 
* * * 
Oh, it was a grand fight! 
On the American side were pint- 
sized pioneers in coonskin hats 
and buckskin, fine-feathered In- 
    
  DOORS OPEN 6:45 
  NOW SHOWING! 
ONE OF THE GREAT ONES! 
ae 
  UNITED ARTISTS 
Released thru 
          
   
              about 160,000, are mainly descend- 
ants of blond, blue-eyed Norsemen 
who began coming to the island in) 
the 9th century from Norway, Ire- 
land, Scotland, the Orkney and 
Shetland Islands, and the Hebrides. 
During. the next few centuries, 
Norse literature flourished, Poetic 
history (the sagas) and mythology 
(the Eddas) were the primary lit- | 
erary forms, Almost all the sur- 
viving early Scandinavian poetry 
is in Icelandic.   
      
      @ © CLOSED TO-NIGHT @ e 
OPEN 
FRIDAY — SAT. - SUNDAY * * & ; WITH THE FINEST IN-CAR HEATERS 
Since that heroic period, the Ice- S 
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t b % “ 
% 
: ae 
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BATTLESHIP ( EASTMAN COLOR in SEASCOPE 
COMING SOON . 
“THIS HAPPY FEELING” 
“SNOWFIRE” 
“LITTLEST HOBO"   
  
  
| dians, as well as Andy Jackson’ S| They had covered 55 miles Across | 
iterrain cut by dangerous cre- | 
ivasses when the rescuer spotted, a eee eeeeeee 
their. tent. | MANNY’S [| : EXTRA—ADDE He landed his ski plane and Huron at Elizabeth Lake Rd. an D miles to a Belgian supply cache. ALL YOU CAN EAT 
5:30 to 9:30 Louis Jourdan 
Maurice Chevalier 
ATTRACTION! es them up, *   
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  EPA 
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IN PERSON ON THE HAMMOND ORGANS 
The World's Greatest Voice in Music... 
GRINNEILL’S 27 S. Saginaw 
  L Sat. "AT WAR WITH THE ARMY” & “HIT THE DECK” J   
        
NOW THRU FRIDAY | 
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NOW LAST 2 DAYS   
    
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  A Trombife as 
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A New Adventure In Entertainment! 
     
     
  
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— BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN — Blue Sky Drive-In -— BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN — Blue Sky Drive-In — 
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“The Truth About Mother Geese” — Donald Duck Cartocal 
NEXT ATTRACTION @ STARTING THURSDAY 
Jean Simmons in “HOME AFTER DARK” Paul Bunyan    
     
       
    
    
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TWENTY- TWO | WIAD 
       
THE PON TIAC ee TUESDAY, DEC ( EM B ER 16, 1958 )   
  AP Wirepheoto 
TURNABOUT—After facing 
eameras for so long, Princess 
Grace of Monaco takes camera 
in hand to try the other end. 
She is taking pictures at a 
gathering following the chris- 
tening of the daughter of her 
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. 
and Mrs. John B. Kelly Jr. 
Prince Ranier and Princess 
Grace were godparents. 
Gourmets Enjoy 
Gifts of Food   'ls Monopoly Charge rt n 
Trade Commission to 
Hear Complaint Against 
‘Diamond Crystal Salt 
WASHINGTON ® — Diamond 
Crystal Salt Co., St. Clair, Mich., 
Trade Commission with illegally 
acquiring a major competitor, Jef- 
ferson Island Salt Co., Louisville, 
Ky. 
The Commission complaint said) 
the merger in January 1957 may 
lessen competition or tend to cre- 
ate a monopoly in the violation 
of the Clayton Antitrust Law.   in Detroit. 
* * * 
The commission said Diamond 
was the fourth largest producer of| 
  idry salt in 1955, and the third 
largest producer of evaporated 
isalt. Jefferson Island ranked sixth 
in dry salt output and third in 
rock salt production. 
Substantial competition existed 
between Jefferson and Diamond 
east of the Mississippi before the 
acquisition, the trade commission 
said, especially in Louisiana, 
Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, 
Georgia, South Carolina, North 
Carolina, Kentucky and Tennes- 
see, 
  salt market 
iagency estimated. 
Says Rambler Sales Unusual Items Tempt 
Appetites of Those Who 
Have Everything 
If ‘at Christmas a present bites, | 
bite back. | 
This is the wise advice of know-| 
ing gourméts — those educated|ney, president of American Motors) ithan a point. Lorillard continued) 
eaters who drool at the thought of|Corp., predicted today that sales lower, dropping a point as profit] } 
“chocolate grasshoppers, fried bum-|of the small-sized Rambler in the/taking continued on this year’s 
1959 fiscal year would be approxi- ble bees and such. 
  
  large 31-4 a 41; medium 29-34: 
Thus Christmas shoppers in mately double the 1958 volume. | Moderate gains were scored by| {Sh 36! grade B large 33: browns— | search of unusual gifts for those) Romney said Rambler sales, | \Harvester, International Nickel, pate x rete < Erg oe 
who “have everything” have aj|based on actual orders for the Union Carbide, American Cyana-|2'%h," grade B large 20%. 
possible solution. Easing their gift|first quarter and dealer projec-| mid, Texas Co., International Tele- 
worries is Canvocation. Canvoca-|tions for the second quarter of the Phone and General Electric. Livestock tion, it appears, is a collection of|1959 fiscal year, are running about) 
exotic food items which come in|140 per cent above the first six New York Stocks DETROIT tee 19 teen (UEDA) ’ : ( — — 
cans, months of fiscal 1958. (Late Morning Quotations) Cattle — Balable 1800. Bulk early supply 
His remarks were made in a \riguiree after decima) votnt are eighths | slaughter steers and heifers: Around 25- 
And prompting a list of sug- 1 be. | Admiral 18.3 Johns Man =) 30 per cent of run cows: about 250} 
ested food gifts is Mrs. Albi speech prepared for delivery be- [Air Reduc 795 Jones & L §6.7|stockers and feeders, steers and heifers | 
ges Sits Is Mrs, ¢ na fore the New York Society af Se-| Allied Ch .... 924 Kennecott 97 |opening slow. weak to 50 cents lower, 
Rewland of the Can Manufac- — - Alifs Chal 277 Kimb Clk 66 jfull decline on choice steers; cows ac- 
turers ‘Institute. Mer suggestions curity Analysts | Alum Ltd 32.1 eirece: 8s 32 | | tive. fully steady; most good and choice 
" : ‘ * * * An Airlin 241 q 900-1200 Ib. steers 25 50-2800: several 
2G Lo Go Romney said the auto industry’s|Am Gun ~ fo3 Hie Mewar .. 125/ehe. Dep croton 260 se around > 24 Lockh Airc “eo cl s ace : 
Mrs. Rowland advises, “AV Big Three — General Motors, Ford /A™ M&Pty 807 Loew, “".” a1 {1230 tos, 28-80: scattering standard to Christmas time popular bachelors and Chrysler — face some maior hes Nigas= Ge bape & Cem oo oe Bee Vien Ges no oe . ac | _ m Tel & Tel 2 i 0 Ibs. 2 27.50; utility and standard may receive innumerable ties. basic problems if they enter the am Tob 04 6 ee 33 hetters 20 50-25 50: sstillcy voowe iN 60: 
women may receive dozens of|small car field with U.S.-built au- apse. a. May D Strs 48 we ceaners pee eters Fs ue Pas 5 _ | rmco ogs — salable 9 utchers under 
stockings and perfumes but tos. He said such a move would|armour & Co 222 Merck... [8 4/260 Re. ctendy: ¥r0-300 ius, 28-66 ocnta 
hardly anyone will be given sev-|‘‘create additional problems for Aveo gl ed ne Mpls Hon 120 eee pee seed) i af cools papted . xe z i 
eral elaborately gift-wrapped cans their big car programs as a result)Beth Steel .. 47.1 Minn M&M ...108 1239 Ibs 18.75-19.25. mixed No. 1 and 2 | Boeing Air 4 these weights 19.25-19 50: no sales No of larks stuffed with creamed and|of the conn petition from their ow IBohn Alum .. 21.1 Mestewers 41.3) 1°No. 2 and 3, 230-260 ibs 17 15-18 50 
truffled goose livers. smaller cars. eo ae Nat Bisc 50.6 rege bc te eee ae 13s. ae r ' BS - utchers scarce, 
And Mrs. Rowland - is out to 142 Net con ais 18.25-18 50: mixed grades sows 300-400 
remedy this sad situation. 503 no am Av 43 |!bs. 1450-15 50: No. 2 and 3 400-600 Ib la S esum 0 a Budd co. 184 Nar Pac 48.6) S0WS 13 25-14.00 
Interest in foreign cooking, | eet 3, Nor Sta Pw .. 214 qreeiete oc salable 700 Btesdy. ce strong; choice and prime vealers 33 00- 
preparation and serving of un- jan Bry 192 Osa Chr ee” 42.00: standard and cond 2600-33 00 dn ac § cull and utilitv 186 00-26 00 
usual foods is growing rapidly in in Chrysler Strike ICarrier Cp... 442 Se sae et Sheep and Lambs — salable 1500 Bulk 
the United States. As a result lan 1 gis Pan AW riA 226) ees Sabahter lambs. ao . ; : . ater Trac eeder lambs and slaughter ewes: slaugh- 
domestic as well as foreign can. | . |Chrysler 495 fs na Pict “ ter lambs. slow mostly 50 cents lower 
ners pack more than a hundred | DETROIT « — After a day's, [Cittes svc e Peps! Cola 163 Be. 00 lower on utility: slaughter | i}e : - ar quip 0 fiz ewes ullv steadv: good and choice 
gourmet items. jlapse, negotiators headed pack tOlCoca Cola 119 phelus p ..,. Jeo 4|®ooled lambs 2000-21 75: utility to eood | talks tgday in a 1>-day-old Chrysler|Colg Paim 866 Philco  93°7/mbs 17 50-20 00: cull to choice slaughter | 
As gifts for the conservative) strike which has idled more ‘than| Co! Lee . De Phill Pet ; ang [ewes 6.00-10 75 | 
gourmet, Mrs. Rowand suggests 49.000 auto workers. ‘Gon Baie S01 bureion oo) a! | the standard cayiar, pate de fois, : [Con N Gas 48 CA noah : : : pate There were no negotiations yes- Gor pN pr "4:,) 94.6 Bes Bi et Grain Prices 
gras, smoked baby clams. How-|terday in the crippling walkouts Cont Can $6 Rex Drug 316 ; 
ever she states that fried bumble} of 7100 Dodge main plant em- cent ce nine oes ne ai CHICAGO GRAIN | . ga Re -. 854] CHICAGO. Dec® 16 (AP) — Openin bees and grasshoppers are rather! ployes over a work rates dis- Sopoem Re i Roval Out .... 485/grain prices: Y . 
commonly served today as appe-!pute. A settlement had been be- Corn Pd $25 St Ree Pep. ag |-.Wheat— Gu axons 11714 
tizers or cocktail hors d’oeuvers. jjeyed near the day before but it Deere a 505) cers 223 \ Mar oe ott, pee 65% For friends with luxury food | fee! through. Di @ peer 418 Shell Ol |... go4/May oie ee 65% qi ; : d 4 oe 4 
tastes there are such items as! President Walter Reuther of the Doux Aire 384 gimimans $2. Sep. . 186% = Rye— rock Cornish hens, Bombay or mal-! United Auto Workers Union, whose uPont 200 6 Socony Lip Dee fe at ast Air L 34.4 Sou Pac 3} = nee : lard duck or ptarmigan. Local 3 is on strike, was reported/gast Rea 1346 Sou Ry |, $63) Gon ae a” Tel Such unusual vegetables aS considering entry into the negotia- B et ee Geen. a liDec. ........ 13%, Lard tdrums)— ‘| 
stuffed vine leaves, hearts of palm tions. lBmer Rad .. 14.5 &td Oil Cal $0.3) mrt ecieasie Tie ay see ae : ‘ 114 “es “SUMAY «5s veces ar 132 
salad and fiddleheads would com- Dodge main strikers walked out! er eelo 4 Ses ot Be so [duly Lill Vey July 0! 10 60 
bine to make a distinguished gift Dee, 2 charging an unfair produc- Fair Mor ao Std Oi! Oh 544) | 5 irestone 2 Stevens. JP 5 6 package, And those .who like sea-| tion speedup, denied by manage-{Food Mach 3, Ape lacie 
food will enjoy a hohday box of| ment. Later layoffs blamed on! eee Tra 182 galt Co 328 00 eed rings Sviv 
canned snails, mussels, octopus and parts shortages made many more Gardner Den 508 Texas Co .. a7 
smoked frogs legs. thousands idle. (Gen “PE lce ue Tian Ww Ree 15 ie Gen Frx< 76 u : . —— hu, tis" is Probation on Larceny: Or, present a friend with a en arctice 48 Twenty Cen 
full menu, accompanied by the MacManus Ad Agency Gen Tel 58.2 Underwd 22 4| 
various cans of foods which com- aa ey ana oo carbide sas DETROIT iF Am whose illette ) Un Pac 36.3 ay — F an whos 
pose it and a jeweled-encrusted to Serve Detroit Times eae He eon Lin 292) witnessing of a slaying led to his’ 4, Un ire 22 : Q t =| 
can opener. . IGt No Ry 408 Unit Fruit 401! arrest on a larceny charge was! 
: : lke rm of (MacManus, John & Gresheund 135 «Un Gas Cp 377 laced on one year's probation Such a menu might include:'|Adams, Inc. has been retained by Hersh Choc 69 US Lines 30 4|P E years propauion) 
nrambo punch and hula highballs the Detroit Times as advertising Found 0 1) Ue Bee 461 yesterday in Recorder's (criminal) | 
as before diner cocktails iwith counsel, effective Jan. 1. mi Cent 475 Westg A Bk 27.3, Court dust Rav 222 Westg El 712] | Be is A aaa these could be served such palat- Phil F. de Beaubien, publisher, Hee Rend io thee Ae aa e is Antonio lacovacci, 44, of 
able hors d'oeuvres as strip/announced the appoiftment vester- ae Te ey ns aren = Co B 4 Detroit. He was charged with steal-| 
cheezers and rooster combs with/day, saying this pointed toward a/Int Bus Mch sel Yaw & Tow . 313/10 an outboard motor from a car | 
kidneys). Alligator soup should be|continued growth pattern of the |int Nick 836 foe ane od Police had been looking for Ia-| 
a warming and palatable experi-|newspaper. IM Crk Cos aoe ~~ icovacci for 10 days when he in- 
ence. Moving on to the entree or| 
main course, The complaint said that as a re- 
‘sult of the merger, Diamond's 
share of dry salt sales in that 
inine-state area jumped from 3.6 
per cent to 25 per cent. Diamond 
and two competitors now control 
‘more than 90 per cent of the dry 
in the area, 
May Double in °59 
NEW YORK uw — George Rom- 
  
  
MacManus, John & Adams has 
how about Scottish headquarters in Bloomfield Hills. 
haggis served with musgreens and,and has offices in New York. Los 
potato sticks? Angeles and Toronto” 
    has been charged by the Federal] f 
Mart Moderate A hearing was scheduled Feb. 24! ® 
market .was moderately higher in 
active trading early today. 
about a point. There were scat- 
stocks were unchanged. 
iin heavy dealings which caused 
ja six-minute delay period in the 
ticker tape. 
the rT 
U S Firms Weigh Further Expansion in Europe By SAM DAWSON 
AP Business News Analyst - 
NEW YORK 
firms who have invested four bil-| will. 
lion dollars in Europe are weigh-|among them, Gradually, a com-|West Germany, Italy, 
ing today the pros‘ and cons of|/mon 
further expansion there. 
in Early Trade NEW YORK (#— The stock 
Leading stocks rose fractions to 
tered losers and a number of 
* * * 
The market rose from the start 
American’ Motors, which 
soared 353 as yesterday’s most 
active stock, again was outstand- 
ings in active and added another 
fraction. President George Rom- 
ney is scheduled to speak in 
New York and more good news 
about this firm is anticipated. 
The major steel] shares did little 
or nothing despite the fact that the 
industry operating rate is sched- 
uled to rise to the highest level 
‘in more than a yeer. 
| x * * 
| Modest gains were shown by se- 
| 
I 
| |   lected aircrafts, electronics, chem- 
icals, oils and nonferrous metals. 
Raytheon, which received a big 
‘Army contract, advanced more 
/sustained rise. 
  
  (AP)—Amierican|the long process that someday In “ree weeks six European 
nations will take the first step in   
eliminate trade barriers 
tariff and 
jagainst the products of the rest 
    
MARKETS | The following are’ top prices) 
covering sales of locally grown 
produce brought to the Farmer's 
Market by growers and sold by 
them in wholesale-package lots 
Quotations are furnished by the 
Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 
Thursday. 
Detroit Produce   
  Parsley Root (bchs.) doz, Saleeees, 
1a Parsnips % ou seve eeeeeeee 
Potatoes (bag! 40 tbe ences #10) 
Radishes, hothouse (bchs.) doz. 2 | 
Squash liclous bu. ..._—..---- 
Tomatoes. Hothse.. No. A '@-Ib. abskt 2 75) 
Turnips, topped. bu. we 15) 
  
Poultry and Eggs | 
DETROIT POULTSY 
DETROIT, Dec. 15 (AP)—Prices paid) 
ee pound f.0.b. Detroit for No. 1 quality 
ive poultry: 
Heavy type hens 18-19: 
10-11: caponettes under 5 lbs. 1942; 
|5 Ibs. 20-21 light type hens| 
  
é DETROIT EGGS 
DETROIT. Dec. 15 (AP)—Eges. 
Detroit, in case lots, 
grades: | - Whites — Grade A jumbo 47: extra) 
large 43-45, wtd. avg. 4442: large 41:/ 
medium 34-35. wtd. avg. 35; small 28-29. 
wtd. avg 29: grade B large 39. Browns 
—grade A extra large 44-45, wtd. avg 
44; large 41: medium 34-35, wtd. avg. 34:) 
small 20: grade B large 39; grade C_ 
large 33. Cheeks 26-33. wid avg 29 
Commercially graded: 
Whites—grade A jumbo 46-47; extra, fob 
  
    
  SFOCK AVERAGES 
iC ompiled by The Associated Frese 
3 15 0 
Indust Rails Util Stocks 
1316 910 
  
YOUR/ ff ndeperden 
Insurance /AGENT 
*e8eves! Vee segee 
to 
BAKER & Richard H. DeWiu 
Res. FE 5-3792 
Accident Insurance 
Automobile Insurance 
Liability Insurance 
Burglary Insurance 
Tenants’ : 714 Community Nat’! 
Bank Bldg. 
Phone FE 4-1568-9 
Homeowners’ Policies HANSEN Donald E. Hansen 
Res. FE 2-5513 
Fire Insurance 
Life Insurance 
Plate Glass Insurance 
Bonds — All Types 
Policies 
wr   
A sharp tongue is the on 
keener with constant use. 
—Washingfon Irving. 1820 ly edge tool that grows 
    
    
    
Jobless Man Shoots | 
Wife, Kills Himself 
i — <A jobless 
‘carpenter was shot ,and fatally 
iwounded at his home yesterday 
and his wife was wounded. 
City police said that Bert Morris, 
35, apparently shot his wife, Helen, 
49, and ten turned the gun on 
himself. Divorce proceedings were| 
Hpending between the two, police 
said. 
Morrig, shot in the chest. died 
last night in Community Health 
| Center. Mrs. Morris was shot in 
ithe shoulder and head but was COLDWATER 
        expected to recover.   
Pe ‘City was established in 1697,                 
    
  
  itervened in a man’s slaying of a 
woman with an axe at a bus stop. 
lacovacci got a cut hand, his name) 
    
  
  | ket, 
le over Nearby 
Sunday of the world will be adopted by |Comman 
the Common Market. 
* * * 
nations The SIX 
  Arson Attempt 
Investigated Blame Vandals 
Tossing Fire-Pot 
Orion Market 
**' 4.50 fire pot into her store. 
* * * 
Detectives believed it was done 
*'by vandals. 
Her store, the Marwood Mar- 
road 
night or 
* * * 
The pot burned until it ran out 
of fuel, 
Inearby. grocery items. but failed to ignite 
Mrs. Martin told police she 
‘would do this 
  i é 
He’s Persistent! 
NEWARK. N. J. P—A 
post office. It made a list 
not unusual requests, 
cluded with: are. France, 
the Nether- ductieaty 
import rules|lands,. Belgium and Luxembourg. (market ’ 
ae ans operating with the consumer sods . 
at 4301 Baldwin Rd., was 
| damaged considerably by black | 
_ soot given off by the burner. 
Detectives said someone appar-| 
ntly had taken a fire pot from a 
construciton project 
early Monday 
‘morning and had then threwn it 
through the front door window of 
federal state the market. 
an} 
has 
no enemies and that she couldn't 
‘think of any reason why someone Market -area hope to 
ishare in the new benefits. Already 
ithere are many benefits for them: 
‘lower labor costs, increasing pro- 
ae a fast expanding 
. Western Europe for) 
| U.S, exports have been falling 
ithis year, although some now see 
          a turn in the tide. In the first nine 
months this year, for examnble, 
ur exports to France were 32 per 
‘cent lower than in 1957, to West 
|Germany 24 per cent lower, 
| 
    
‘Box Company Merger 
‘Now Up to Stockholders 
WATERLOO, lowa Stock- 
holders of Central Fiber Products 
‘Co. will be asked to vote on a 
proposal to merge with two other 
‘companies to form one of the 
largest box manufacturing com- 
for panies in the United States. 
Three of the company’s 40 plants 
Into are in Iowa. 
|. J. K. Limbert, vice president 
of the firm’s produce supplies di- 
jvision here, made the announce- 
  FRUITS Oakland County Sheriff's Dept. ment yesterday in a statement re- 
Apples. Delicious, bu. ..............4.00/detectives Hey were inv eee) leased by W. D-P. es of Hutch- 
eocmee. See hte Myson Kans president Bt 1 OM Hse rt oe Bech, MOM Oo Horseradish, No 4 DK. ...-.se0-00-. 3:26 br. Lake Ori ion, told deputies Rapids, Mich. and the Ohio Box eae avene eect a ee 175,someone had thrown a lighted | poard Co. or Rittmen, Ohio. 
There was no indication how soon 
‘the merger plans will be submitted 
to the stockholders. 
Holly Man Sentenced 
For cashing an income tax re- 
fund check belonging to his em- 
‘ployer, Duane F. Peterson, 26, of 
'1055 Kurtz Rd., Holly Township, 
yesterday was sentenced ‘to from 
1 to 14 years in the State Prison 
‘of Southern Michigan at Jackson 
by Oakland County Circuit Judge 
i‘Wilham J. Beer 
News in Brief 
Walter Steil, 
Rd., Commerce Township, reported 
to Oakland County sheriff's depu- 
ties yesterday that someone took 
$370 cash from an unlocked cash 
register at his station while he was 
outside servicing an auto. 
letter 
| to Santa Claus was opened at thé | 
of 
and con- 
“T hope I get most ‘mons Dr., 
reckless driving charge Monday 
ibefore Independence Township 
of these things. If not I will try Justice William H. Stamp and 
again next year. ‘paid a fine of $40 plus $10 costs: , owner of the Pure | has been growing rapidly. What this can mean to Amer- 
ican manufacturers is pointed vut 
thus by David Rockefeller, vice 
chairman of the Chase Manhattan 
Bank, New York: ‘‘Many products, 
particularly in machinery lines, 
that we have been exporting may 
well have to be produced abroad 
in the future if we are to retain 
our foreign markets.” 
An analysis of the European 
Common Market by the Manage- 
ment consultant firm of Booze, 
Allen & Hamilton International, 
Ltd,, of Zurich, Switzerland, and 
Washington, D. C., shows that 
most U. S. corporations now oper- 
ating there favor full ownership of 
their facilities, 
* * * 
The benefits U, S. plants in the 
six nations have include these: 
1. Between 1954 and 1956 ‘abor 
productivity rose at an annual rate 
of 4 per cent in Holland, 8 per cent 
in France and Belgium, while only 
2 per cent a year in the United 
|States. (It’s done better than that 
here this year.) 
2. Average rates of all workers 
in 1957 ranged from 47 cents an 
hour in the Netherlands to 7? 
cents in France, according to‘a 
University of Wisconsin study, 
compared with $2.24 an hour in 
the United States. 
* * * 
3. European consumer demand 
The 
Zurich firm expects this to in- 
crease rapidly as the Common 
Market stimulates production. 
In a_ study of production costs 
in the European Common Market, 
the National Industrial Conference 
Board today says that of 38 nrod- 
ucts produced there by American 
firms for which it got cost data, 
68 per cent show lower output unit 
costs than for the same product 
made here by the same firms, In 
10 of the cases the unit costs were 
from 85 to aa per cent cheare= Material costs there were lower 
than here for 13 of the products, 
higher for 14, and about the same 
for 11. - 
The consultant firmi adds one 
word of caution: as the six na- 
tions slowly meet their current 
needs, they may come to limit 
American investment opportuni- 
ties in the Common Market. 
NOTICE OF SALE   
auction for cash one 1966 Chevrolet 2 
Dr Sed.. Serial No. A56N091307, at 10°00 
a.m, December 22, 1958, at Alders Serve 
lce Station. Baldwin Ave., Pontiac, Mich- 
igan, taken from Wade H. Payne under 
a contract of conditional sales The 
undersigned reserves the right to bid, 
Universal CIT. Credit Corporation 
UNIVERSAL C.1.T. CREDIT CORP, 
By D. L. sant Jt. 
ec. 16 
——   
  
TELEPHONE 
ANSWERING 
SERVICE You Leave— 
It Rings— 
We Answer It! 
CALL 
FE 4-2541   
  
  
Industrial Supplies 
Make Us Your Stockroom 
CUTTING TOOLS 
and SUPPLIES, Inc.     
  The undersigned will sell at ¢publi¢ , 
  
JACK COLE Walled Lake 
          
    
  Gas Station at 1106 Oakley Park | 
Carl A. Bohn, 26, of 6497 Shim- 
pleaded guilty to a| 
  
MORE LIGHTS — Several 
Co. installed four experiment 
avenue and Saginaw street ee r 
corner in Pontiac. Throwh ef 
Association and the Pontiae Ai 
390 new lights of a more divers: 
to the intersection. They appe 
tree, which will greet shoppers   Pontiac Phote 
agn the Consumers Power 
| fluorescent street lights at Oakland 
it the most brightly illuminated 
of the Downtown Merchants 
Ch of Commerce, 
range have been added 
huge 60-foot Christmas 
the holiday season. Press 
Weer KS 
frats 
ta Janior amber 
fied color 
rr oon this 
throughout 
  Prey. day .. 304.6 207514 ictu i ews == 
Week ago gor ate oe gee [and picture in n BADEES and »|Month ago ..... 3039 132.5 05 207 " landed in jail. Year ago ....0..228 4 784 712 152 red 7 (1958 high 3055 1333 910 207 Clift Register, 40, of 10517 Fan- 
1958 low... .... 2347 809 72.9 1566 wood St., Royal Oak Township, is' ABP REP 2800 134.7 775 1888 irst d 1957 low 2260 782 662 1509 awaiting trial on first degree mur-| 
(der charges in the slaying of his) 
(ed Nephier (0. jwite, Louise, 38, Police said he! 
. High Low Noon |/adrmtied the slaying. | Allen Elect. & Equip Co. 2.2 22 : : 
[Baldwin Rubber Gee 154 164 Iacovacci had told police at the 
oss Gear Co 27 28.4| scen t was Me 5 Bo eee cant coe ia 16 cene that he was a Marine Tao) 
Howell Elect. M Co * @ s1 62/ expert. j Peninsular M. Prod Co * 76 #&4 } 
|The Prophet Co ‘* Oe MG 
|; Rudy Mfg. Co. ° : 8 | 
|Toledo Edison Co 161 161 161 Royal Oaker Arraigned | *No sale: bid and asked i 
on Coed Assault Charge 
EAST LANSING (UPD — A 
Michigan State University junior 
from Royal Oak was free on $3,000, 
bond today after standing mute) 
on a charge of attempted rape of 
a university coeg. 
* * * | 
The student, Robert D. Wright,' 
23, furnished the bond when ar-| 
raigned before Lansing Township) 
Justice George Hutter yesterday. 
Police charge Wright with at-| 
tempted assault of an 18-ypar-old. 
coed in East Lansing city. park 
last Thursday. 
  
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   \\ THE PONTI \ | ae Vie, | aie 
AC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1958 ater - ; oe ry Te = Pen 
TWENTY-ONE   
  
  By CLAIRE COX 
NEW YORK (UPI) — The roar 
of Fifth Avenue’s traffic got some 
pretty “sharp competition today 
from the voice of one man, 
Will Crutienden, Town Crier of 
Hastings, England, signaled the 
opening of the British Travel 
Association’s new headquarters 
here by bellowing out a procla- 
mation of Queen Elizabeth I in 
® voice loud enough to make even 
taxi drivers stop honking their 
horns. 
He explained that he cries, but 
never shouts. 
“Tt comes from way down here,” 
he said, pointing to his abdomen. 
* * * 
For 10 years, Cruttenden has 
been Town Crier of his home town.   — 2 Queen's Proclamation Read by Town Crier 
Man's Voice Soars Over It's a job that goes all the way 
back to 1205—the oldest town crier- 
ship in Britain. 
The tasks have changed some- 
what through the centuries, but 
the requirements are the same— 
a volee that can be heard dis- 
tinetly up to a fifth of a mile 
away in fog or sunshine every 
day of the year and sometimes 
at night. 
In old days, the Town Crier’s 
chores included lashing felons at 
_|the whipping post, warning neigh- 
bors to stay away from residents 
with contagious diseases, calling 
recruits to the navy and keeping 
the waters of the Bourne River 
free from pollution. © 
* * * 
The basic reason for a Town 
Crier back in the 13th Century was 
  
What Does lke Consider 
Big Government Spending? By JAMES MARLOW 
Associated Press News Analyst 
WASHINGTON (AP)—How high 
is up? Or, what’s President Eisen- 
hower’s idea of big spending? 
On Nov. 5 — at a news confer- 
ence the day after the Republi- 
cans’ election disaster—he protest- 
ed against what he called the big 
spenders among the Democrats. 
He told the newsmen his last 
two years in the White House 
would be devoted to economy. 
* * * 
But government spending under 
his administration has been going 
up steadily since 1956 and this 
year is running at a record peace- 
time high of nearly 80 billion dol- 
lars. : 
And the deficit—the difference 
between what the government gets 
in revenue and its expenses—will 
be about 12 billion dollars, ac- 
cording to official estimates. 
* * * 
One of the main reasons for the}. 
deficit, of course, was the reces- 
sion, which reduced individual and 
corporate income and thus meant 
a drop in tax revenues. 
But Monday, after a White 
House conference with Eisenhow- 
er on his programs for next year, 
congressional Republican leaders| 
came away figuring that spending 
next year will be around 80 billion 
again. 
* * * 
But they said Eisenhower is de- 
termined to balance the budget— 
. meaning, to make spending no 
  
Marriage Licens 
.Applications 
@arl D. Scribner. 33 Allison 
Patricia A. Leach, 30 Clarence Yale 
William C. Bassow. Marion 
Alyon B. Monschein, South Lyon 
Lonnie Phillips, 344 Howard McNeill 
Dorothy Beasley, Detroit 
David V. McAboy, 146 Baldwin 
Caren 8. Berzon, 2223 Somerset 
Robert M. Lawrence, Roya! Oak 
Carol M. Roberts, Birmingham 
Nathan H. Justin, 15 Piddis 
Darlene K. Magiey, 238 Mechanic 
John F. McCauley ITI, Royal Oak 
Barbara H. Mitchell, Birmingham 
Paul F. Oliver, 32 E. Oxford 
Carol F. Slatton, Drayton Plains 
Arthur L. Batcher, Detroit 
Mary E. Jones, Farmington 
: Ralph J. Bowen, Lake Orion 
Effie M. Crawford, 71 Mechanic 
Edward F. Wohl, Rochester 
Lillie M. Cooper, Rochester 
Lioyd N. Lindland, Detroit 
Mildred A. Lalic, Birmingham 
Arthur F. Kemman, 1912 Sherwood 
Anna T. Duffey, Lansing 
James E. H. Gitbert, Farmington 
Bonnie A, Lee, Farmington 
John R. Walch, 280 N. Saginaw 
Marion V. Brown, 19 Garner 
Herman W. Hagadorn, Walled Lake 
Virginia M. Rock, Walled Lake 
Robert C. Huemiller, 2815 Buick 
_ Carrie E. Barnett, 2807 Buick 
Charles R. Davis, Farmington 
Edna M. Hoskins, Farmington 
Clarence E. Land, Rochester 
Carol A. Hoffman, Rochester 
Gearge F. Hogg. Birmingham 
Marilyn L. Bone, Holly 
Victor Nelson, 3228 Watkins Lake 
Eva M. Aderholdt, 3228 Watkins Lake 
Wayne Harker Jr., 69'2 Putnam 
Mary A. Glascock, 36 Mechanic A 
Clement J. Cleveland, Gunnison. Colo. 
Carol J. Tuttle, 1160 Lake Angelus Shores 
Bradley M. Beam, Milford 
Evelyn M. Smith, Milford 
John M. Hackett. 782 Owego 
Kathleen M. Currier, 23 S. Jessie 
Howard D. Evanston, Rochester 
Florence Roseina, Rochester 
Gerald N. Head, Waterford 
Carol D. Pran@&, Drayton Plains 
lyle G. Mix Jr., Milford 
Judith L. Tinik, Clawson 
Nels W. Hickson, 2495 Littletel! 
Paye L. Almas, 2345 Cheltingham 
Lesley J. Cox, Walled Lake 
Dellia R. Wilson, Walled Lake 
Richard B. Thompson, Milford 
Jean C. Grappan, Ortonville 
Harlan B. Beaty, South Lyon 
Myrtle Harmon, South Lyon greater than revenue—if possible, 
and may do so. It’s quite an if, 
especially with no indication of 
any move to boost taxes. 
But the GOP leaders challenged 
heavy spenders in Congress to 
go along with the balance. 
* * * 
This repeated Republican tactic 
—of referring to big spenders in 
Congress while Eisenhower's ad- 
ministration keeps spending at a 
peacetime high—ig beginning to 
look thin and sound monotonous. 
* It's just a hope and a guess that 
Eisenhower can spend 80 billion 
and balance the budget too. 
kok We 
If the economy continues its up- 
ward movement next year, the 
government should get more rev- 
enue than this year. But, even so, 
will it be enough to match the 
outgo? Ae ' ‘ 
to serve as a walking newspaper, 
announcing all the latest occur- 
rences. 
Today, Cruttenden’s main task 
is to walk the streets of the sea- | 
side port of Hastings announcing 
various entertainments and civic 
events on a 6- to 8-mile daily 
beat. 
~ He also-calls out the names of 
lost children and dogs and once 
notified a woman in swimming that 
her house was on fire. 
* * * 
“The main qualification is to. 
have a loud voice,” he said in an) 
interview. “‘I've never lost my. 
voice yet. I trained on English 
beer, and that has kept me in good | 
soice. I guess you could say,   Sth Avenue Traffic 
|by the 20th Century—traffic. however, that I got my basic train-. 
ing as\a sergeant in the British 
Army.” \ 
Cruttenden has several occupa- 
tional hazards with which te con- 
tend. The worst are barking 
dogs and smart alecs who follow 
him around imitating him, 
Hé has the same treatment for) 
both. . 
“I ignore them,”’ he said. 
There is another hazard, created 
“I try to keep out of busy, 
streets,"’ Cruttenden said, “I cah 
beat the traffic noises for very): 
long. My voice is like an old 
    creaking gate when I compete) 
with traffic for very long, even on) 
Fifth Avenue.” | ps   
THE GIRLS 
    
              WHERE EVERYBODY 
GONE, MISTAH 
MASOR @ IT SO 
QUIET NOU KIN 
ALMOST HEAR A 
PUSSON CHANGE 
HIS MIND/IS NOU #§ 
WORKIN’ ON THAT 
MASTERY 
ees 
VARA * A 
          
     
   
    
     Sees ss 
SS ~ 
eS oho 
FE Ste gehen os Soe 
SSNS SS           
              
  
  
             
     
  BOARDING HOUSE     By Franklin Folger 
“Honey, on your way home would you pick up a couple of chicken 
_qdinners? I spent the entire afternoon at cooking school.” 
  
SANTA TO A NEEDY FA 
THE BOYS ARE OUT BLY! 
TOYS AND T AM PLANNI 
       
     
      — RY: OF COURSE,      
        
  MY WORD, HANEN'T YOU HEARD, JASON? E 
WE OF HOOPLE MANOR ARE PLAYING 
BUT SUBSTANTIAL CHRISTMAS DINNER FOR THE FAMILY/«« NOW THEN,A Z 
BOUILLABAISSE ~ PERHAPS POTATOES |, 
SOUFFLE ~~ EGG PLANT A LAMOS ~~ 
DRESSING/«« AS FOR 
7 THE WINE LIST, 
LET ME MUSE 
x0 sy aa Service ne. 7. Peg. apace DID HE SAY Z WSs 
  MILY THIS YEARS YH 
NG CLOTHES AND YW 
NG A SIMPLE 4 
YY 
       
  WITH OYSTER 
     
         
      
  (MPLE BUT 
SUBSTANTIAL, 
  \%   
OUT OUR WAY   
          1% 
  LIVING BEYOND A HUNDRED ye 
      JTRWILLIAMS 
TM. Reg. US. Pat OF. [2-16 
©, 1958 by MEA Service. Ine. 
    
  
DONALD DUCK . __By Walt Disney   
    
      TLL HAVE... NO... 
1 THINK THE... ‘OH, DEAR! IT ALL. LOOKS SO GOOD! 
OR BETTER, THE...) 
         HOW MUCH MONEY DO yO 
HAVE WITH YOU TI) i 
          
    RIVETS   
  
    
  
      
    
  By George Sixta 
   
      
  
    BOUTS AND HER BUDDIES 
A TSR! ALL THESE BOORS AND 
— RECORDS ON INVESTING) 
  
      
      fer | 
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= 79)    
            
    
    
    
       PSST! HEY, JOE! 
DO YOU RECOGNIZE 
THOSE SYMPTOMS ?    
  YEAH/ THAT CONDITION 
COMES WITH BEING A 
\| | NEW FATHER / 
      
DIXIE DUGAN BPEARING CF POOR VEARS, HALF OF 
OOK *O.A.B, CLUB" 
  
HEY— HOW “BOUT ATWIRL, GIRL ? vy 
A ~ 
ot 
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MAYBE...1 DONT, WELL, TS BEEN SUCH] [04,1 DONT \WE'LL 
IT'LL BE KNOW HOW / WHY'D HE| A LONG TIME NOW THINK THATS / KNOW 
sx GOOD TO \ OUR CAVE BE ANY \ HE MIGHT BE OUT VERY IN A 
() SEE OOP MAN WILL \ DIFFERENT \. OF THE HABIT uikery L MOMENT 
‘a, m BEHAVE THIS og 
0) AK THIS TRIP TIME? 
me = : 
         
   
    
    
  
             
    
     
  fr 
  
  © 1988 by NEA Service, tne. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. OF. 
By. Carl Grubert   
    
      
         
      
  
  
  
    
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— iat Fe We aL sj el wr P e 24 — 
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© 1998 by MEA Service, ne. TM. Rag UR Pan, OF 
By Leslie Turner     
           EDIE, I SAW 
AL HARMON IN) 
LONDON A FEW 
WEEKS BEFORE 
  DEATH? OF: MAX...1 HADN'T 
HEARD! I LOST TRACK OF 
WIM AFTER HE MARRIEO 
AGAIN 
   
      
   
    ' 
re ANO LEAVE HiS 
   
  
    THAT FLOPPED, TOO! FOR YEARS HE WROTE SCRIPTS FOR HE WROTE THE BBC. AL SEEMED OBSESSED FURIOUSLY WITH THE IDEA THAT HE'D DIE 
AUGHTER NOTHING... i “VTHATS WHY | 
                     
     
  WELL, L THINK HE LLy 
DID! NE GO INTO KEHBARSAL 
NEXT MONTH. AND SIWCE 
ELLEN |S HIS ONLY HEIR, 
THE ROYALTIES GO TO HER’ 1 WHY IT'S A 
PLAY! POOR AL 
~HIS AMBITION 
WAS TO WRITE 
A HIT, BUT— 
      
    
    
  By Ernie Bushmiller       
  
AUNT FRITZI--- 
hae SHOULD BE    
           
      YOU HAVE A. 
WONDERFUL 
REPUTATION       
       
     
Tan fing. WB Put OF. — AM righ sonerved Copr. 1988 by Uered Peatore Syedicete, ime EIR (LE PUSAN AT 2 tS. YOUR CREDIT 
AT EVERY SHOP IN TOWN IS GOOD 
  
      
    
    
        
  
    
      
      
  I DION'T EVEN KNOW 
       
  
          
GRANDMA € 
| HEY, THERE'S BACK? HE'D BEEN AWAY. WHERE 3 
| YANCEY/ I DID HE GO? g 
| | DIDN'T KNOW (> + z | HE WAS ¢ 
| BACK \y 4 
| ; 
ite é 
> 
] 2 
F 3 
By Charles Kuhn   
FOR HOME..../ 
  T 
Ti — 
| 
        GEE, GRANDMA SURE IS RUNNIN’ 
    . AN’ HERE COME TH’ 
KIDS IN HOT 
PURSUIT.” 
          
    
© ek Reg Peters agence es ee 
  ate DID SHE GOP 
     WHICH WAY DID GHE.GO, 
MR, OTIS? WHICH WAY 
eee) 
   GRANDMA HAD A WHOLE | 
BASKET O' JELLY BEAN S.) 
GUMDROPS, ICE CREAM 
AN’ BANANAS....